Making the case for anesthesia ICU leadership: 5 key notes

As anesthesiologists seek out value-adding opportunities, Jackson, Mich.-based Anesthesia Business Consultants President Tony Mira penned a letter on behalf of anesthesiologists serving as intensive care unit leaders.

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Here’s what you should know.

1. Despite anesthesiologists’ expanding role in healthcare, the specialty faces competitive challenges as health system financial and regulatory demands increase, Mr. Mira said.

2. Anesthesia groups should partner with hospitals to develop programs and services, Jerry Ippolito, an ABC consultant, wrote.

“Anesthesiology groups must go into the hospital board room bringing value and presenting opportunities to assist hospitals,” Mr. Ippolito wrote.

3. One such opportunity for anesthesiologists is in the intensive care unit, Mr. Mira said. A critical care physician shortage paired with the general population’s rising age leaves a gap that anesthesiologist could fill.

“Intensivists have been shown to help improve patient outcomes, including survival rates, reduce complications and shorten ICU lengths of stay,” Mr. Mira said.

4. U.S. anesthesiologists play a smaller role in critical care medicine than those around the world.

5. The perioperative surgical home model provides anesthesiologists a path towards becoming leaders in “the multidisciplinary delivery of seamless, cost-efficient care,” Mr. Mira said.

More articles on anesthesia:
Northern Kentucky University adds nurse anesthesia program: 3 key notes
Colorado hospitals substitute nitrous oxide for epidural in pregnancy: 4 key notes
NAPA to present at 2017 AACD Perioperative Leadership Summit

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