Masters Degrees (Anaesthesiology)
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Browsing Masters Degrees (Anaesthesiology) by Author "Lemmer-Malherbe, J."
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Item Open Access A comparative review of obstetric anaesthesia training, supervision and experience of public sector doctors in the Free State, 2005 vs. 2019(University of the Free State, 2021) Machai, Seta Liteboho; Lemmer-Malherbe, J.; Lamacraft, Gilian𝗜𝗻𝘁𝗿𝗼𝗱𝘂𝗰𝘁𝗶𝗼𝗻: Obstetric anaesthesia is ranked first as a contributor to “potentially preventable deaths per underlying cause” of maternal death in South Africa. Lack of training, experience and supervision has been cited as the cause of these deaths. This study aimed to evaluate those public sector doctors administering obstetric anaesthesia in the Free State and compare training, experience and supervision findings with those of 14 years ago in a similar study by G Lamacraft. 𝗠𝗲𝘁𝗵𝗼𝗱: This was a cross sectional analytical study carried out between the 11th and 19th December 2019. All caesarean section sites within the Free State were identified from a list obtained from the provincial government. Hospital CEOs and clinical managers were informed prior to the visit. On Arrival a list of doctors administering obstetric anaesthesia was obtained from the clinical manager. An audience with the doctors was requested and those that could not come were traced to their work areas and given the questionnaire. An implied consent was stated at the beginning of the questionnaire which was self-administered. The same questionnaire as by Lamacraft (with one added question) was handed over after a brief description of the study and collected into a box at the end of the session. The collected data was kept anonymous. 𝗥𝗲𝘀𝘂𝗹𝘁𝘀: A total of 124 medical doctors met the inclusion criteria with 103 of them completing the questionnaire, thus an overall response rate of 83%. Level 1 and level 2 hospital response rates were 78% and 91% respectively. This was an improvement from the 69% overall response rate of 2005. Exposure to obstetric anaesthesia during internship has improved: in 2005 12% of respondents lacked exposure but this dropped to 5% in 2019. The reported level of supervision also improved: In 2005 21% of supervision was by junior medical officers and only 25% by consultants compared to 2019 where junior medical officer’s supervision contributed 15% and consultants 44%. A lack of exposure and training post internship was observed with only 1 doctor having a Diploma in anaesthesia in 2005 compared to 5 in 2019. Employment of a senior anaesthetist improved: 54% and 47% reported to have no senior anaesthetist employed by their hospital in 2005 and 2019 respectively. Unfortunately the added responsibility of neonatal resuscitation while administrating anaesthesia to the mother increased slightly from 42% in 2005 to 47% in 2019. 𝗖𝗼𝗻𝗰𝗹𝘂𝘀𝗶𝗼𝗻: Training, supervision and experience of doctors in level 1 and 2 hospitals in the Free State post internship has marginally improved in the last 14 years. Greater improvement has been noted during internship training.Item Open Access The emotional impact of a death on the theatre table on the anaesthetist in South Africa(University of the Free State, 2019-05) Van Niekerk, J. J. S.; Lemmer-Malherbe, J.Introduction: Perioperative deaths in developing countries are a common occurrence, thus an anaesthetist in South Africa is likely to experience at least one death on the table during his career. It affects the anaesthetist emotionally and can lead to a variety of disorders like anxiety, depression, substance abuse and most commonly post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Certain interventions, like debriefings, have been proposed in order to mitigate the impact of a death on the table, but are not done regularly. The aim of this study was to determine the emotional impact that a death on the theatre table has on anaesthetists. We determined whether the anaesthetist was debriefed, had time off after the death and measured the prevalence of subsequent PTSD. Methods: The study followed a quantitative observational, cross-sectional design with convenient sampling using an online questionnaire. The Impact of Events Scale- Revised was used to measure the likelihood of PTSD. The study population was anaesthetists (consultants and registrars) registered with SASA who has experienced a death on the table. Results: A total of 1859 potential participants were contacted of which 453 responded, yielding a 24% response rate. The final analysis included 375 completed questionnaires. A total of 28.8% (CI 24.4%- 33.6%) had a probable diagnosis of PTSD. Age, years of experience and level of qualification did not affect the likelihood of developing PTSD. Only 15.5% of respondents were debriefed although 82.7% would have wanted a debriefing. Of the respondents with probable PTSD, 93% would have wanted debriefing, 85% would have liked time off and 82% felt the event influenced their work decisions. Correlating figures in those without PTSD was lower (78%, 61% and 67% respectively). Conclusion: The prevalence of PTSD following a death on the table was high and debriefings were not done in most cases. The authors recommend the development of workplace protocols to help an anaesthetist deal with a death on the table.