Perioperative pulmonary aspiration: An analysis of 28 reports from the thai anesthesia incident monitoring study (Thai AIMS)

Objective: To study the patients' characteristics, outcomes, contributory factors, factors minimizing the incidence and suggested corrective strategies for perioperative pulmonary aspiration in Thailand. Materiel and Method: This is a prospective descriptive research design. The relevant data w...

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Main Authors: Sireeluck Klanarong, Sirilak Suksompong, Thanu Hintong, Waraporn Chau-In, Prasatnee Jantorn, Thewarug Werawatganon
Format: Journal
Published: 2018
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http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/50249
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Institution: Chiang Mai University
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spelling th-cmuir.6653943832-502492018-09-04T04:27:12Z Perioperative pulmonary aspiration: An analysis of 28 reports from the thai anesthesia incident monitoring study (Thai AIMS) Sireeluck Klanarong Sirilak Suksompong Thanu Hintong Waraporn Chau-In Prasatnee Jantorn Thewarug Werawatganon Medicine Objective: To study the patients' characteristics, outcomes, contributory factors, factors minimizing the incidence and suggested corrective strategies for perioperative pulmonary aspiration in Thailand. Materiel and Method: This is a prospective descriptive research design. The relevant data was extracted from the incident reports on aspiration from 51 hospitals across Thailand during the study period between January 1 and June 30, 2007 from the Thai Anesthesia Incident Monitoring Study (Thai AIMS) database. Descriptive statistics was used. Each incident report was reviewed by three senior anesthesiologists. Any disagreement was discussed to achieve a consensus. Results: From 1,996 incident reports, there were 28 reports (1.4%) that met the definition of pulmonary aspiration. Most of the incidents occurred in patients with ASA 1-2 (85.7%), during the official hour (64.3%) and the anesthesiologists were in charge (67.9%). Eleven incidents (39.3%) occurred during induction, seven (25%) during maintenance and seven (25%) during emergence phases. Anesthetic factors played an important role in 26 incidents (92.9%). All the incidents except one (96.4%) were considered human errors and 25 (89.2%) were preventable. Of the incidents caused by human errors, nine (32.1%) were caused by skill-based errors. Thirteen patients (46.4%) had major physiologic changes and 10 (35.7%) of them needed unplanned ICU admission. Ten patients (35.7%) needed prolonged ventilator support and two (7.14%) of them died. Conclusion: The contributing factors that might lead to the incidents were improper decision (75%), lack of experience (53.5%) and lack of knowledge (21.4%). Factors minimizing incident, were vigilance (85.7%), having experienced assistant (50%) and experience in that situation (25%). Suggested preventive strategies were guidelines practice in anesthetic management (67.8%), improvement of supervision (57.1%), additional training (42.8%) and quality assurance activity (28.6%). 2018-09-04T04:27:12Z 2018-09-04T04:27:12Z 2011-04-01 Journal 01252208 01252208 2-s2.0-79955458544 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=79955458544&origin=inward http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/50249
institution Chiang Mai University
building Chiang Mai University Library
country Thailand
collection CMU Intellectual Repository
topic Medicine
spellingShingle Medicine
Sireeluck Klanarong
Sirilak Suksompong
Thanu Hintong
Waraporn Chau-In
Prasatnee Jantorn
Thewarug Werawatganon
Perioperative pulmonary aspiration: An analysis of 28 reports from the thai anesthesia incident monitoring study (Thai AIMS)
description Objective: To study the patients' characteristics, outcomes, contributory factors, factors minimizing the incidence and suggested corrective strategies for perioperative pulmonary aspiration in Thailand. Materiel and Method: This is a prospective descriptive research design. The relevant data was extracted from the incident reports on aspiration from 51 hospitals across Thailand during the study period between January 1 and June 30, 2007 from the Thai Anesthesia Incident Monitoring Study (Thai AIMS) database. Descriptive statistics was used. Each incident report was reviewed by three senior anesthesiologists. Any disagreement was discussed to achieve a consensus. Results: From 1,996 incident reports, there were 28 reports (1.4%) that met the definition of pulmonary aspiration. Most of the incidents occurred in patients with ASA 1-2 (85.7%), during the official hour (64.3%) and the anesthesiologists were in charge (67.9%). Eleven incidents (39.3%) occurred during induction, seven (25%) during maintenance and seven (25%) during emergence phases. Anesthetic factors played an important role in 26 incidents (92.9%). All the incidents except one (96.4%) were considered human errors and 25 (89.2%) were preventable. Of the incidents caused by human errors, nine (32.1%) were caused by skill-based errors. Thirteen patients (46.4%) had major physiologic changes and 10 (35.7%) of them needed unplanned ICU admission. Ten patients (35.7%) needed prolonged ventilator support and two (7.14%) of them died. Conclusion: The contributing factors that might lead to the incidents were improper decision (75%), lack of experience (53.5%) and lack of knowledge (21.4%). Factors minimizing incident, were vigilance (85.7%), having experienced assistant (50%) and experience in that situation (25%). Suggested preventive strategies were guidelines practice in anesthetic management (67.8%), improvement of supervision (57.1%), additional training (42.8%) and quality assurance activity (28.6%).
format Journal
author Sireeluck Klanarong
Sirilak Suksompong
Thanu Hintong
Waraporn Chau-In
Prasatnee Jantorn
Thewarug Werawatganon
author_facet Sireeluck Klanarong
Sirilak Suksompong
Thanu Hintong
Waraporn Chau-In
Prasatnee Jantorn
Thewarug Werawatganon
author_sort Sireeluck Klanarong
title Perioperative pulmonary aspiration: An analysis of 28 reports from the thai anesthesia incident monitoring study (Thai AIMS)
title_short Perioperative pulmonary aspiration: An analysis of 28 reports from the thai anesthesia incident monitoring study (Thai AIMS)
title_full Perioperative pulmonary aspiration: An analysis of 28 reports from the thai anesthesia incident monitoring study (Thai AIMS)
title_fullStr Perioperative pulmonary aspiration: An analysis of 28 reports from the thai anesthesia incident monitoring study (Thai AIMS)
title_full_unstemmed Perioperative pulmonary aspiration: An analysis of 28 reports from the thai anesthesia incident monitoring study (Thai AIMS)
title_sort perioperative pulmonary aspiration: an analysis of 28 reports from the thai anesthesia incident monitoring study (thai aims)
publishDate 2018
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=79955458544&origin=inward
http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/50249
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