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Anesthesiology is the practice of medicine dedicated to the relief of pain and total care of
the surgical patient before, during and after surgery.
The education of anesthesiologists has kept pace with their expanding role in offering the highest quality health care available anywhere in the world. Today's anesthesiologists are physicians who complete a four-year college program and graduate from college before undergoing an additional four years of medical school education just like your surgeon and primary care physician. After this same medical education as other physicians, your physician anesthesiologist must under go an additional four years of medical education specializing in the medical specialty of anesthesiology (the medical practice involving caring for patients undergoing anesthesia). After completion of this 12 years of education, your physician anesthesiologist undergoes an examination process, including a comprehensive written examination and a rigorous oral examination that covers all aspects of medicine and anesthesiology to become Board Certified. With 12 years of education your anesthesiologist is the most educated and most qualified person to administer and/or direct your medical care during your anesthetic experience. We apply our knowledge of medicine to fulfill our primary role in the operating room to ensure your comfort during surgery and to make educated medical judgments to protect you during this vulnerable experience. These medical judgements include treating and regulating changes in your critical life functions -- breathing, heart rate, blood pressure, level of consciousness -- as they are affected by the surgery being performed and the medication being administered. We are the medical specialists who are the doctors who will immediately diagnose and treat any medical problems that might arise during your surgery or during your recovery period in the postanesthesia care unit. Fellowships in an anesthesia subspecialty and in education or research may also be taken for an additional 13th year of education. More than 90 percent of the active membership of the American Society of Anesthesiologists have been certified as Diplomates of the American Board of Anesthesiology. Contents:
Scope of PracticeThe medical expertise of this specialist has caused a dramatic expansion of the role of the anesthesiologist. Although historically, anesthesiologists have been known primarily as physicians who administer anesthesia to alleviate pain and suppress consciousness of the patient undergoing surgery, they also provide medical care and consultations in many other settings and situations in addition to the operating room. The anesthesiologist is the perioperative physician ("peri-" meaning "all-around") who provides medical care to each patient throughout his or her surgical experience. This includes medically evaluating the patient before surgery (preoperative), consulting with the surgical team, providing pain control and support of life functions during surgery (intraoperative), supervising care after surgery (postoperative) and medically discharging the patient from the recovery unit. In the operating room:
Within the confines of the operating room suite, which is often comprised of several separate operating rooms, the activities of the anesthesiologist are seen by few people outside of the surgical and nursing team. Even the patients themselves are unable to recall much of their involvement with this vital specialist because most of the anesthesiologist's critical work is done while the patient is anesthetized! The role of the anesthesiologist in the operating room is to: 1) provide continual medical assessment of the patient; 2) monitor and control the patient's vital life functions -- heart rate and rhythm, breathing, blood pressure, body temperature and body fluid balance; and 3) control the patient's pain and level of unconsciousness to make conditions ideal for a safe and successful surgery. In the postanesthesia care unit (recovery room)
For pain management:
Because of their specialty training, anesthesiologists are uniquely qualified to prescribe and administer drug therapies for acute, chronic, cancer and childbirth pain. In childbirth, the anesthesiologist manages the care of two people, providing pain relief with epidural or spinal blocks for the mother while managing the life functions of both the mother and the baby. Read "The Management of Pain" brochure. In critical care and trauma medicine:
During cardiac laboratory procedures:
For diagnostic procedures and nonsurgical treatments:
Research and Clinical StudiesSome of the most significant strides in medicine and surgery have been directly attributed to anesthesiology's advances in patient monitoring, improved anesthetic agents and new drug therapy. Research at the clinical and basic science levels has been done almost exclusively by anesthesiologists or Ph.D. scientists with the goal of continually improving patient care and safety. Research is conducted in each of the subspecialties of pediatric, geriatric, obstetric, critical care, cardiovascular, neurosurgical and ambulatory anesthesia. Other areas of study include: blood transfusions and fluid therapy, infection control, difficult airway management, cardiopulmonary resuscitation, complications, new devices and methods of monitoring, pharmacology, pain therapy and organ transplant. Patient SafetyComplications from anesthesia have declined dramatically over the last 25 years. Since 1970, the number of anesthesiologists has more than doubled and, at the same time and at virtually the same rate, patient outcomes have improved. In just the last decade, estimates for the number of deaths attributed to anesthesia have dropped 25-fold from 1 in 10,000 anesthetics to 1 in 250,000 today. All this has occurred during a time when the youngest of premature infants in neonatal units survives intricate, lifesaving procedures and 100-year-old patients undergo and recover from major surgeries that were once thought to be impossible. Educational and Legislative ActivitiesAnesthesiologists, through their national professional organization, the American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA), participate in many continuing medical education programs and legislative activities. These include:
HistoryThe Society was founded in 1905 when nine physicians from Long Island, New York organized the first professional anesthesia society. The Society expanded to 23 members in 1911 and named itself the New York Society of Anesthetists. As its purpose and scope of involvement in anesthesia-related issues grew and attracted other interested physicians nationwide, the Society changed its name to the American Society of Anesthetists in 1935 and then to the American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) in 1945. ASA moved its offices from New York to Chicago in 1947 and then to the Chicago suburb of Park Ridge, Illinois, in 1960, where today it serves a membership of more than 34,000. MembershipThe highest decision-making power is vested in the ASA House of Delegates, composed of about 300 delegates who represent the interests of members in the United States and Puerto Rico. Active members of ASA must be Doctors of Medicine (M.D.) or Osteopathy (D.O.) who are licensed physicians and have successfully completed a training program in anesthesiology approved by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) or the American Osteopathic Association (AOA). ASA has a special category for residents in anesthesiology training. Resident members must be physicians in a full-time anesthesiology residency program accredited by ACGME or AOA. Other categories of membership include retired members, life members (past presidents), honorary members and affiliate members (physicians or scientists not in the clinical practice of anesthesiology but who maintain an interest in the speciality). Publications
Copyright © 2000 American Society of Anesthesiologists. All rights reserved. |
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