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by jbandela1 643 days ago
> Several years ago, I was involved in a case that illuminates the difficult position many doctors today find themselves in. The patient was pregnant, close to delivery, and experiencing dangerous declines in her baby’s heart rate. She had been on a blood thinner, which kept me, the anesthesiologist, from placing an epidural in her back. She also had strange airway anatomy, which would make it a struggle to put her to sleep quickly if an emergency cesarean section became necessary. I advised the obstetrician to perform an elective cesarean section now, in advance, while we had good working conditions, and not to wait for an emergency, where time is of the essence, and where the delay needed to induce general anesthesia might seriously injure the baby.

I am a doctor and that scenario scares me. This has a very high likelihood of stuff hitting the fan and you need to think about your plan when it does.

You want stuff to hit the fan during daytime when everyone is around. In this case, during the day surgery is around, ENT, around, other anesthesiologists all of these can rush in if needed to help you secure an airway. You also have the neonatologists around.

If it happens in the middle of the night, the staffing will be much reduced and you won’t have as many resources available.

One of the most important things to learn as a doctor is when algorithms and guidelines actually apply to the current situations.

“Life is short, the art long, opportunity fleeting, experiment treacherous, judgment difficult”

- Hippocrates

2 comments

When I had a stat section late at night and the nurse who was circulating the case (for the non-medical, a “circulator” is a nurse whose job is to get whatever is needed to make the surgery happen smoothly) didn’t know how to hook up the Glidescope (um, the best airway-securing device ever) while I’m trying to mask-ventilate a full-term patient and save the baby (you don’t want to mask-ventilate highly pregnant patients; their stomachs empty slowly and they are at high risk for vomiting and then inhaling it; you want a tube straight past their vocal cords so that the lungs are protected), I went to the nurse manager on the next regular day and said that not knowing what a Glidescope is and how to set it up was an unforgivable lack of knowledge. I don’t directly blame the nurse; she was thrown into a situation she had not been trained for. I blame those who didn’t teach her before putting her on night shifts with very few other nurses around.

“This is a chance to do this case electively, in a controlled manner, in a situation in which Bad Things are monumentally more likely to occur. At noon, I can have all the help in the world. At two AM, it’s me, and I only have two hands and one brain.”

As I have said in codes before, I’m eventually out of ideas, so if you have one that we haven’t tried yet, talk. I will not judge you as dumb. I may not do it, but I will listen and consider it seriously before making that call.

Ho bíos brakhús, hē dè tékhnē makrḗ, ho dè kairòs oxús --- O βίος βραχύς, η δὲ τέχνη μακρή, ὸ δὲ καιρὸς οξύς
Ah, it's Romanized Greek. Yes, I've forgotten most of the Classical Greek I took in college but I'm not as stupid as I sometimes feel.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ars_longa,_vita_brevis