CHAPTER 6 With What Other Disciplines Should We Work?
Cooperation among specialties, especially between anesthesiology and surgery, is the stuff of legend. Of note, a legend is defined as “a story coming down from the past; one popularly regarded as historical although not verifiable.”
And, of course, he could hear them too.
• Anesthesiology and Surgery—to foster better understanding in the OR, and possibly reduce the number of fist fights!
• Anesthesiology and Internal Medicine—we most often encounter each other in the supercharged atmosphere of a code. No time for much dialogue in a real code, but there sure is in a Simulator mock code.
• Anesthesiology and ICU nursing staff—another group of highly trained specialists we work with every day. Training together in the Simulator makes perfect sense, plus can help build esprit de corps among ICU teams.
• Medical students and nursing staff—as the twig bends, so grows the tree. At an early point in their training, future doctors can practice doctor–nurse interactions in a crisis.
• Anesthesiology and OR nursing staff—we work hand in glove with the OR nursing staff through all kinds of emergencies. Because we work together, we should practice together too.
• Anesthesiology and anesthesia techs—we need their help in a big way in the big cases, so practicing together in the Simulator with them makes sense too.
• Anesthesiology and Pharmacy/Information Technology/Billing—automatic pharmacy dispensing systems, automated billing and record keeping, all these elements are entering the ORs. And new systems have quirks, glitches, and potential disasters. Work them out in the harmless setting of the Simulator.
• ER docs and EMTs—hand-off of the critically ill patient has its own set of dangers. Do a few “critical handoffs” in the Simulator to make sure the transition from emergency response team to hospital team is seamless.
• Anesthesiology and OB—you want a critical situation where two specialties may be at odds, try the stat C-section. Every variant (lost airway, twins with the second one breech, shoulder dystocia that just won’t go) you can rehearse together in the Simulator.
• Anesthesiology and Pediatrics—neonatal resuscitation after a stat C-section? The Simulator’s the place to work it out.
Unit clerk—sends out the word, makes sure the code cart is stocked, ready to go, and refilled at the end of the code