Multicentered study of model of anesthesia related adverse events in Thailand by incident report (the Thai anesthesia incidents monitoring study): Results

Objective: The Thai Anesthesia Incidents Monitoring Study (Thai AIMS) was aimed to identify and analyze anesthesia incidents in order to find out the frequency distribution, clinical courses, management of incidents, and investigation of model appropriate for possible corrective strategies Material...

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Main Authors: Charuluxananan S., Suraseranivongse S., Jantorn P., Sriraj W., Chanchayanon T., Tanudsintum S., Kusumaphanyo C., Suratsunya T., Poajanasupawun S., Klanarong S., Pulnitiporn A., Phuping Akavipat M.D., Punjasawadwong Y.
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Language:English
Published: 2014
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http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/handle/6653943832/2405
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spelling th-cmuir.6653943832-24052014-08-30T02:00:49Z Multicentered study of model of anesthesia related adverse events in Thailand by incident report (the Thai anesthesia incidents monitoring study): Results Charuluxananan S. Suraseranivongse S. Jantorn P. Sriraj W. Chanchayanon T. Tanudsintum S. Kusumaphanyo C. Suratsunya T. Poajanasupawun S. Klanarong S. Pulnitiporn A. Phuping Akavipat M.D. Punjasawadwong Y. Objective: The Thai Anesthesia Incidents Monitoring Study (Thai AIMS) was aimed to identify and analyze anesthesia incidents in order to find out the frequency distribution, clinical courses, management of incidents, and investigation of model appropriate for possible corrective strategies Material and Method: Fifty-one hospitals (comprising of university, military, regional, general, and district hospitals across Thailand) participated in the present study. Each hospital was invited to report, on an anonymous and voluntary basis, any unintended anesthesia incident during six months (January to June 2007). A standardized incident report form was developed in order to fill in what, where, when, how, and why it happened in both the close-end and open-end questionnaire. Each incident report was reviewed by three reviewers. Any disagreement was discussed and judged to achieve a consensus. Results: Among 1996 incident reports and 2537 incidents, there were more male (55%) than female (45%) patients with ASA PS 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 = 22%, 36%, 24%, 11%, and 7%, respectively. Surgical specialties that posed high risk of incidents were neurosurgical, otorhino-laryngological, urological, and cardiac surgery. Common places where incidents occurred were operating room (61%), ward (10%), and recovery room (9%). Common occurred incidents were arrhythmia needing treatment (25%), desaturation (24%), death within 24hr (20%), cardiac arrest (14%), reintubation (10%), difficult intubation (8%), esophageal intubation (5%), equipment failure (5%), and drug error (4%) etc. Monitors that first detected incidents were EKG (46%), Pulse oximeter (34%), noninvasive blood pressure (12%), capnometry (4%), and mean arterial pressure (1%). Conclusion: Common factors related to incidents were inexperience, lack of vigilance, inadequate preanesthetic evaluation, inappropriate decision, emergency condition, haste, inadequate supervision, and ineffective communication. Suggested corrective strategies were quality assurance activity, clinical practice guideline, improvement of supervision, additional training, improvement of communication, and an increase in personnel. 2014-08-30T02:00:49Z 2014-08-30T02:00:49Z 2008 Article 01252208 18839839 JMTHB http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-48249121912&partnerID=40&md5=71e7e5b07c1cf325e993f43a1653b64f http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/handle/6653943832/2405 English
institution Chiang Mai University
building Chiang Mai University Library
country Thailand
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language English
description Objective: The Thai Anesthesia Incidents Monitoring Study (Thai AIMS) was aimed to identify and analyze anesthesia incidents in order to find out the frequency distribution, clinical courses, management of incidents, and investigation of model appropriate for possible corrective strategies Material and Method: Fifty-one hospitals (comprising of university, military, regional, general, and district hospitals across Thailand) participated in the present study. Each hospital was invited to report, on an anonymous and voluntary basis, any unintended anesthesia incident during six months (January to June 2007). A standardized incident report form was developed in order to fill in what, where, when, how, and why it happened in both the close-end and open-end questionnaire. Each incident report was reviewed by three reviewers. Any disagreement was discussed and judged to achieve a consensus. Results: Among 1996 incident reports and 2537 incidents, there were more male (55%) than female (45%) patients with ASA PS 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 = 22%, 36%, 24%, 11%, and 7%, respectively. Surgical specialties that posed high risk of incidents were neurosurgical, otorhino-laryngological, urological, and cardiac surgery. Common places where incidents occurred were operating room (61%), ward (10%), and recovery room (9%). Common occurred incidents were arrhythmia needing treatment (25%), desaturation (24%), death within 24hr (20%), cardiac arrest (14%), reintubation (10%), difficult intubation (8%), esophageal intubation (5%), equipment failure (5%), and drug error (4%) etc. Monitors that first detected incidents were EKG (46%), Pulse oximeter (34%), noninvasive blood pressure (12%), capnometry (4%), and mean arterial pressure (1%). Conclusion: Common factors related to incidents were inexperience, lack of vigilance, inadequate preanesthetic evaluation, inappropriate decision, emergency condition, haste, inadequate supervision, and ineffective communication. Suggested corrective strategies were quality assurance activity, clinical practice guideline, improvement of supervision, additional training, improvement of communication, and an increase in personnel.
format Article
author Charuluxananan S.
Suraseranivongse S.
Jantorn P.
Sriraj W.
Chanchayanon T.
Tanudsintum S.
Kusumaphanyo C.
Suratsunya T.
Poajanasupawun S.
Klanarong S.
Pulnitiporn A.
Phuping Akavipat M.D.
Punjasawadwong Y.
spellingShingle Charuluxananan S.
Suraseranivongse S.
Jantorn P.
Sriraj W.
Chanchayanon T.
Tanudsintum S.
Kusumaphanyo C.
Suratsunya T.
Poajanasupawun S.
Klanarong S.
Pulnitiporn A.
Phuping Akavipat M.D.
Punjasawadwong Y.
Multicentered study of model of anesthesia related adverse events in Thailand by incident report (the Thai anesthesia incidents monitoring study): Results
author_facet Charuluxananan S.
Suraseranivongse S.
Jantorn P.
Sriraj W.
Chanchayanon T.
Tanudsintum S.
Kusumaphanyo C.
Suratsunya T.
Poajanasupawun S.
Klanarong S.
Pulnitiporn A.
Phuping Akavipat M.D.
Punjasawadwong Y.
author_sort Charuluxananan S.
title Multicentered study of model of anesthesia related adverse events in Thailand by incident report (the Thai anesthesia incidents monitoring study): Results
title_short Multicentered study of model of anesthesia related adverse events in Thailand by incident report (the Thai anesthesia incidents monitoring study): Results
title_full Multicentered study of model of anesthesia related adverse events in Thailand by incident report (the Thai anesthesia incidents monitoring study): Results
title_fullStr Multicentered study of model of anesthesia related adverse events in Thailand by incident report (the Thai anesthesia incidents monitoring study): Results
title_full_unstemmed Multicentered study of model of anesthesia related adverse events in Thailand by incident report (the Thai anesthesia incidents monitoring study): Results
title_sort multicentered study of model of anesthesia related adverse events in thailand by incident report (the thai anesthesia incidents monitoring study): results
publishDate 2014
url http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-48249121912&partnerID=40&md5=71e7e5b07c1cf325e993f43a1653b64f
http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/handle/6653943832/2405
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