BMJ 1998;316:3-4 (3 January)

Editorials

Audit Commission tackles anaesthetic services

Flexibility, delegation, and changing roles may improve value for money

Anaesthesia is the largest single hospital specialty. There are over 5500 anaesthetists in England and Wales alone, just under half of whom are consultants. Yet, as the introduction to Anaesthesia under Examination,1 published last month by the Audit Commission, points out, few mainstream medical specialties are as poorly understood. Many patients do not realise that anaesthetists are doctors or that they have responsibilities outside the operating theatre.2 Anaesthetists now provide clinical skills in acute and chronic pain management, intensive care, obstetrics, interhospital transfer, trauma, and resuscitation. This new found diversity may be partly to blame for current difficulties in service provision, for consultants' job plans have often not changed to reflect their increased activities.

Anaesthesia under Examination is based on a substantial amount of data. Most British hospitals replied to postal surveys on consultant shortages, maternity services, and services for pain after surgery; 39 randomly selected acute trusts underwent . . . [Full text of this article]


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Relevant Articles

Anaesthetists consume 3% of trust expenditure but affect 60% of trust income
Andrew Sharples and Oliver R Dearlove
BMJ 1998 317: 1587. [Extract] [Full Text]

Audit Commission tackles anaesthetic services
Joseph E Arrowsmith, Ratan Alexander, Guy de Lisle Dear, Tong Joo Gan, Robert P Hill, Adeyemi Olufolabi, Iain C Sanderson, Andrew J Soppitt, D N Robinson, V Chopra, and D W Green
BMJ 1998 316: 1827. [Extract] [Full Text]

This article has been cited by other articles:

  • Smith, A. F., Kane, M., Milne, R. (2004). Comparative effectiveness and safety of physician and nurse anaesthetists: a narrative systematic review. Br J Anaesth 93: 540-545 [Abstract] [Full text]  
  • Sharples, A., Dearlove, O. R (1998). Anaesthetists consume 3% of trust expenditure but affect 60% of trust income. BMJ 317: 1587-1587 [Full text]  
  • Arrowsmith, J. E, Alexander, R., Dear, G. d. L., Gan, T. J., Hill, R. P, Olufolabi, A., Sanderson, I. C, Soppitt, A. J, Robinson, D N, Chopra, V, Green, D W (1998). Audit Commission tackles anaesthetic services. BMJ 316: 1827a-1827 [Full text]  



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