Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2744129 | Anesthésie & Réanimation | 2015 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
The regional anesthesia (LRA) has great benefits in the management of emergency patients. A regional investigation was conducted to estimate the practice of LRA by emergency physicians. This multicenter and descriptive survey was conducted from January 1 to April 30, 2012 in the 46 emergency departments of a French county. One hundred forty-four emergency physicians completed a questionnaire about their training and daily LRA's practice. The rate of participation reached 45% and 71% of doctors practiced LRA. Indications were: pain relief (71%), exploration (60%) or reduction of fracture (52%). There was a statistical association between the experiment of the doctor and the practice of the LRA (PÂ =Â 0.01). Seventy-two percent of physicians judged the usefulness of LRA. However, the practitioners underlined a lack of training (46%), rare indications (30%), a fear (6%) and a lack of interest (3%). The nerve block realized were: the femoral block (60%), the hand block (21%), the face block (13%) and the footblock (2%). Physicians were: 65% did not know the recommendations and 69% were unaware of lipid emulsions used for treatment of local anesthetic systemic toxicity. Ninety-seven percent of practitioners are interested in a regional training. Ten years after the recommendations, it turns out that there is a lack of knowledge and a real need for training of emergency physicians in the studied county.
Keywords
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Authors
Mathieu Violeau, Hugues Lefort, Olivier Mimoz, Cédric Touquet, Ismaël Rida-Chafi, Ivan Rafei-Darmian, Agnès Ricard-Hibon, Bertrand Debaene, Fatima Rayeh-Pelardy,