4.6 Article

Anaesthesia clinicians' perception of safety, workload, anxiety, and stress in a remote hybrid suite compared with the operating room

Journal

BRITISH JOURNAL OF ANAESTHESIA
Volume 131, Issue 3, Pages 598-606

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.bja.2023.04.028

Keywords

anxiety; non-operating room anaesthesia; occupational stress; patient safety; stress; well-being; workload

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This study compares the difference in anaesthesia clinicians' perception of safety, workload, anxiety, and stress when performing similar neurosurgical procedures in either the operating room (OR) or a remote MRI room. The results show that working in the remote MRI room is associated with lower perceived safety and higher workload, anxiety, and stress for anaesthesia clinicians.
Background: Anaesthesia care outside of the standard operating room (OR) can be challenging. This prospective matched case-pair study describes the difference in anaesthesia clinicians' perception of safety, workload, anxiety, and stress in two settings by comparing similar neurosurgical procedures performed in either the OR or a remote hybrid room with intraoperative MRI (MRI-OR).Methods: A visual numeric scale for safety perception and validated instruments for workload, anxiety, and stress were administered to enrolled anaesthesia clinicians after induction of anaesthesia and at the end of eligible cases. The dif-ference in outcomes reported by the same clinician for unique pairs of similar operations performed in both settings (OR vs MRI-OR) was compared using the Student t-test with the general bootstrap algorithm to address the presence of clusters.Results: Over 15 months, 37 clinicians provided data for 53 case pairs. Working in the remote MRI-OR vs OR was asso-ciated with lower perceived safety (7.3 [2.0] vs 8.8 [0.9]; P<0.001), higher scores in the workload subdomains effort and frustration (41.6 [24.1] vs 31.3 [21.6]; P=0.006 and 32.4 [22.9] vs 20.7 [17.2]; P=0.002, respectively), and higher anxiety (33.6 [10.1] vs 28.4 [9.2]; P=0.003) at the end of the case. Stress was rated higher in the MRI-OR after induction of anaesthesia (26.5 [15.5] vs 20.9 [13.4]; P=0.006). Effect sizes (Cohen's D) were moderate to good.Conclusions: Anaesthesia clinicians reported lower perceived safety and higher workload, anxiety, and stress in a remote MRI-OR compared with a standard OR. Improving non-standard work settings should benefit clinician well-being and patient safety.

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