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1.
Ann Med Surg (Lond) ; 78: 103775, 2022 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35734739

RESUMO

Background: Anesthesia Equipment malfunction is one of the most common factors contributing to intraoperative surgical patient morbidity and mortality. It is impossible to give anesthesia without proper anesthesia machine checks and airway equipment preparation. Therefore, all anesthesia professionals should make sure that the anesthetic machine and equipment are working correctly. Method: An institutional-based prospective observational study was conducted at the University Comprehensive Specialized Hospital, Operation rooms, from April 10, 2020 to May 10, 2020. About 90 anesthetists were working regularly in the operation theater both emergency and elective patients. Those include; 26 Msc holders, 17 MSc students, 7 BSc anesthetists, and 40 graduating BSc students. These descriptive data were presented with frequency, percentage, and table. Result: The overall compliance rate was 87%. Whereas; 12.46% of clinicians have not met the standard. Out of standards that were not performed, 25.81% were not available from the setup. Conclusion: The result shows that there was poor compliance with anesthesia machine check and equipment preparation before anesthesia in the operation theater according.

2.
Front Pediatr ; 10: 827663, 2022.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35223702

RESUMO

INTRODUCTION: Perioperative respiratory adverse events (PRAEs) are frequent among pediatrics surgical patients and are accountable for 3/4th of perioperative critical incidents and 1/3rd of cardiac arrests. OBJECTIVE: Assess the prevalence and factors associated with PRAEs among pediatric surgical patients in University Hospitals in Northwest Ethiopia, 2020. METHODOLOGY: After ethical approval obtained prospective observational study was conducted among 210 pediatric surgical patients. Perioperative respiratory adverse events were defined as the occurrence of any episode of single/combination of coughing, breath holding, hypoxemia, laryngospasm and bronchospasm. Bivariate and multivariate binary logistic regression analyses were performed and variables with p < 0.05 at 95% confidence interval were considered as statistically significant. RESULTS: The prevalence of PRAEs was 26.2% (CI: 20.5-30.9%). A total of 129 episodes of PRAEs were occurred and of them, 89 (69.0%) were occurred in the postoperative period. Desaturation was the predominant adverse event which was observed 61 (47.3%) times. Age <1 year (AOR: 3.6, CI: 1.3-10.0), ASA ≥ 3 (AOR: 5.2, CI: 1.9-22.9), upper respiratory tract infections (URTIs) (AOR: 7.6, CI: 1.9-30.2), secretions in the upper airway (AOR: 4.8, CI: 1.4-15.9) and airway related surgery (AOR: 6.0, CI: 1.5-24.1) were significantly associated with PRAEs. CONCLUSIONS: Prevalence of PRAEs was high among pediatric surgical patients; the postoperative period was the most critical time for the occurrence of PRAEs and desaturation was the commonest PRAE. Age <1 year, URTIs (recent or active), secretions in the upper airways, ASA ≥ 3 and airway related surgery were significantly associated with PRAEs. Clinicians should perform effective risk assessment, preoperative optimization and preparation for the management of PRAEs.

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