/_media/adv/web/images/2011/20111124_Arthrex_TB-378x82.jpg

Subscriptions

Advertising

Resources

About Us

Contact Us

Create An Account Forgot Your Password?
Trouble logging in or creating an account? click here
Home This Month E-Weekly Newsletter Building a Facility Article Archive Second Opinions
Search:
Benchmarking
General Surgery
Accrediting/Quality
Anesthesia
Code/Bill/Reimburse
Building/Renovating
/_media/adv/web/images/2011/20111226_Soma_LB-154x100.gif
/_media/adv/web/images/2012/20120126_APIC_LB-154x100.jpg
/_media/adv/web/images/2012/20120123_PDI_LB-154x100.gif
/_media/adv/web/images/2011/20110502_Provista_LB-154x100.gif
Outpatient Surgery E-Weekly

Can Protein-Free Diets Reduce Surgical Complications?

Restricting proteins and amino acids from patients' diets in the days leading up to surgery may lower complication risks, say researchers at the Har...

Robotic Surgery Patients May Have Unrealistic Expectations

Men expecting quicker returns to physical activity after robotic prostate surgery may have unrealistic expectations for the procedure, according to ...

Making the Most of a Staffing Dollar

"Today more than ever, you need to be certain you're getting your money's worth for every minute your staff are on the clock," says Donna Ferguson, ...

Home > News > August, 2010

Study: States With CRNA-Only Anesthesia See No Rise in Complications

As CRNAs run more cases, complication and mortality rates remain the same.

Published: August 4, 2010
Categories: Anesthesia, Legal/Regulatory, Safety, News

There is little difference in complication and mortality rates in states that allow CRNA-only anesthesia and states that require physician-supervised anesthesia care, according to a 6-year study of surgical outcomes from a Medicare database.

Since 2001, when Medicare began allowing states to opt out of requirements for physician-supervised anesthesia care, 15 mostly rural states have opted out. In a study funded by the American Association of Nurse Anesthetists, Brian Dulisse, PhD, and Jerry Cromwell, PhD, of the Research Triangle Institute in Waltham, Mass., extracted outcomes data from 480,000 surgical cases performed between 1999 and 2005 in states that required physician supervision, as well as 14 opt-out states. (California opted out in 2009 and was not included.)

In the opt-out states, nurse anesthetists provided the anesthesia in 1 out of 5 cases; in states requiring supervision, nurse anesthetists provided anesthesia in 1 out of 10 cases. The percentage of cases done by CRNAs increased from 17.6% to 21% in the opt-out states after they began allowing CRNAs to practice alone, according to the study, published in the August issue of Health Affairs.

As the number of CRNA-only cases increased in the opt-out states, the complication rate did not change substantially. Before opting out, the odds ratio for complications associated with CRNA cases was 0.798. After opting out, when more cases were performed solely by CRNAs, the odds ratio for complications was 0.813, according to the study. Similarly, there was little change in complication rates for states that did not opt out.

Mortality rates went up and down in opt-out states, ranging from 1.76 to 3.01 for CRNA-only cases and 1.45 to 2.92 for CRNA-physician team cases. "Despite the shift to more anesthetics performed by nurse anesthetists, no increase in adverse outcomes was found," write the authors.

"We find no evidence that opting out of the oversight requirement harms patients," says Dr. Cromwell. "Based on these findings we recommend that CMS repeal the supervision rule."

Kent Steinriede

© Copyright Herrin Publishing Partners LP 2011. REPRODUCTION OF THIS COPYRIGHTED CONTENT IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. We encourage LINKING to this content; view our linking policy here.


Also in the News...

Was This Orthopedic Surgeon Too Slow, or Just Conscientious?

Drunken Night Out Costs Pediatric RN His Job

Doctor Loses License for Touching Anesthetized Patients' Breasts

Automatic Meal-Break Deductions

Paper Clip Dentist Sentenced to Year in Jail

Gynecologists Offering Breast Augmentation and Ophthalmologists Doing Liposuction

Tragic Error: Remove Monitoring Equipment From Patient Given High Doses of Pain Meds

© Copyright Herrin Publishing Partners LP 2011. REPRODUCTION OF THIS COPYRIGHTED CONTENT IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. We encourage LINKING to this content; view our linking policy here.

Already have an account? Please sign in:
Email Address:
Password:
PRODUCT & SERVICE RESOURCES
Did You See This?
A showcase of products and services geared to make your facility better.

Architects' Showcase
Is a beautiful, efficient new facility in your future?
/_media/adv/web/images/2012/20120115_Olympus_AR-300x250.jpg
Other Articles That May Interest You
Steris Launches New Healthcare Education Portal
Steris University promises to be a "knowledge factory" for healthcare professionals.
Enlist Your Patients in the Fight Against Healthcare-Associated Infections
Download free, customizable educational materials from APIC.
Are Screening Colonoscopies Overused?
Two new studies suggest some elderly patients are being screened unnecessarily.