Title: The value of anaesthesiologists in the COVID-19 pandemic: a model for our future practice?
Abstract: The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic places healthcare systems under extreme pressure. As the infection spread, the number of infected patients requiring hospital admission was often overwhelming, displacing care for other groups. Many required ICU admission.1Grasselli G. Zangrillo A. Zanella A. et al.Baseline characteristics and outcomes of 1591 patients infected with SARS-CoV-2 admitted to ICUs of the Lombardy Region, Italy.JAMA. 2020; 323: 1574-1581Crossref PubMed Scopus (3886) Google Scholar In places, the (expected) number of patients requiring ICU admission far exceeded the number of ICU beds and care providers normally available. Hospitals therefore doubled or tripled their ICU capacity by decreasing or halting elective surgery and establishing ICU beds in empty operating rooms and PACUs.1Grasselli G. Zangrillo A. Zanella A. et al.Baseline characteristics and outcomes of 1591 patients infected with SARS-CoV-2 admitted to ICUs of the Lombardy Region, Italy.JAMA. 2020; 323: 1574-1581Crossref PubMed Scopus (3886) Google Scholar Historically and currently, the majority of physicians practicing intensive care have trained in anaesthesia and a high proportion continue some anaesthetic practice. Whilst mono-specialty intensivists form an important component of the ICU workforce and are well represented in specialty leadership, their numbers are small. Therefore, anaesthesiologists, usually redeployed from the operating rooms, have provided most of the medical care in temporary COVID-19 ICUs. The leading role of anaesthesiologists in the care of COVID-19 patients makes sense. Most patients admitted to the ICU require invasive mechanical ventilation after tracheal intubation.1Grasselli G. Zangrillo A. Zanella A. et al.Baseline characteristics and outcomes of 1591 patients infected with SARS-CoV-2 admitted to ICUs of the Lombardy Region, Italy.JAMA. 2020; 323: 1574-1581Crossref PubMed Scopus (3886) Google Scholar Because procedures with aerosolisation create the highest risk of COVID-19 infection, they should be performed by the most experienced care provider. Since anaesthesiologists are particularly experienced in airway management, intubations in COVID-19 patients are performed by them, putting them at risk of viral transmission.2Fredman B. Nathanson M. Smith I. Wang J. Klein K. White P. Sevoflurane for outpatient anesthesia: a comparison with propofol.Anesth Analg. 1995; 81: 823-828PubMed Google Scholar,3Cook T. Risk to health from COVID-19 for anaesthetists and intensivists–a narrative review.Anaesthesia. July 17 2020; https://doi.org/10.1111/anae.15220Crossref Scopus (33) Google Scholar Moreover, even with increased ICU capacity, in some hospitals the number of patients requiring mechanical ventilation may exceed the number of beds and ventilators, and anaesthesiologists are commonly responsible for transferring critically ill patients between hospitals. Finally, COVID-19 patients on non-ICU wards may develop respiratory insufficiency very rapidly. Anaesthesiologists are able to support their generalist colleagues in the care of these patients through ICU outreach and remote vital signs monitoring.4Breteler M.J. KleinJan E.J. Dohmen D.A. et al.Vital signs monitoring with wearable sensors in high-risk surgical patients: a clinical validation study.Anesthesiology. 2020; 132: 424-439Crossref PubMed Scopus (79) Google Scholar Thus, the COVID-19 pandemic has showcased the skills of anaesthesiologists as team workers, consultant physicians for the critically ill, and as medical managers, strategists, and leaders.5Yang M. Dong H. Lu Z. Role of anaesthesiologists during the COVID-19 outbreak in China.Br J Anaesth. 2020; 124: 666-669Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (25) Google Scholar Unusually, our specialty has caught the public eye including the appearance of an anaesthesiologist on the cover of an April 2020 issue of Time magazine. However, before we become too pleased with ourselves, we should reflect on our specialty's journey and develop strategies for our future development. Although anaesthesiologists dominated the emergence of intensive care,6Kelly F.E. Fong K. Hirsch N. Nolan J.P. Intensive care medicine is 60 years old: the history and future of the intensive care unit.Clin Med (Lond). 2014; 14: 376Crossref PubMed Scopus (104) Google Scholar a significant proportion of us are careful to avoid the ICU. Whether this reflects anxiety around care of the critically ill or the attractions of private practice and diminished out-of-hours working remains uncertain. As with both dinosaurs and mammals, intensive care medicine has evolved differently on different continents. The European model has always been interdisciplinary and is today profoundly competency based.7Barrett H. Bion J.F. An international survey of training in adult intensive care medicine.Intensive Care Med. 2005; 31: 553-561Crossref PubMed Scopus (67) Google Scholar,8Bion J. Rothen H.U. Models for intensive care training. A European perspective.Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2014; 189: 256-262Crossref PubMed Scopus (27) Google Scholar Anaesthesiologists remain at the centre, but do so as part of a specialist intensivist community which is well organised and confident. In the USA, few anaesthesiologists train in or practise critical care and surgical leadership of ICU management is commonplace, although an intensivist model may improve outcomes whilst reducing costs.9Nathens A.B. Rivara F.P. MacKenzie E.J. et al.The impact of an intensivist-model ICU on trauma-related mortality.Ann Surg. 2006; 244: 545-554PubMed Google Scholar Issues of control, of patient care, and the income that the care generates, may contribute to expectations of surgical autonomy. In 2008 the American Board of Surgery stated confidently 'Surgical critical care is a specialty of surgery…' (www.absurgery.org). At the turn of the millennium, a special article in Anesthesiology warned 'Today the American critical care anesthesiologist is an endangered species, overshadowed in numbers and political clout by colleagues from pulmonary medicine and surgery.'10Hanson C.W. Durbin Charles G. Maccioli Gerald A. et al.The anesthesiologist in critical care medicine: past, present, and future.Anesthesiology. 2001; 95: 781-788Crossref PubMed Scopus (44) Google Scholar The authors went on to advocate '…substantial reengagement in the practice of Critical Care Medicine'. Five years later, in 2005, the ASA task force on paradigms of anaesthesia practice in 2025 proposed that 'No doubt, health care delivery systems, and hospitals in particular, will favor the specialty that provides more overall value and diversity of practice paradigms.'11Miller R.D. Report from the task force on future paradigms of anesthesia practice.ASA Newsl. 2005; 69: 20-23Google Scholar Eventually, in 2013 the ASA proposed the Perioperative Surgical Home, 'A coordinated system of perioperative care'. Although annotated to make clear that it was not intended to usurp surgical leadership, this was nevertheless a common surgical view as some subsequent commentary was less appealing to surgeons ('… a unique care environment handled by one perioperative team and coordinated by a leader. Anesthesiologists are ideally positioned to lead this new model'). Surgeons were sceptical about the benefits to routine care and worked towards 'Team-Based Surgical Care' whilst remaining carefully silent on any possibility of anaesthesiologist leadership. As a consequence, the concept has achieved limited traction (Fig. 1). In contrast, the implementation of Enhanced Recovery after Surgery (ERAS) is near universal and anaesthesiologists who run pre-assessment clinics, provide cardiopulmonary exercise testing and engage with prehabilitation ahead of an ERAS driven surgical episode are readily accepted as perioperative physicians. It may simply be a matter of presentation, but the Perioperative Surgical Home looked like a land-grab by anaesthesiologists. We should learn from that experience. Perhaps we could fall back to the operating rooms? We would do so at our peril. Almost every aspect of anaesthetic practice is under challenge by new technologies and alternative providers. Our equipment is becoming smarter and fluids, hypnotics, analgesics, and neuromuscular blocking agents can all be delivered by closed-loop systems.12Joosten A. Rinehart J. Bardaji A. et al.Anesthetic management using multiple closed-loop systems and delayed neurocognitive recovery: a randomized controlled trial.Anesthesiology. 2020; 132: 253-266Crossref PubMed Scopus (60) Google Scholar Laryngeal mask airways service the vast majority of spontaneously breathing patients, bypassing the traditional bag and mask skills. Videolaryngoscopes and other devices facilitate tracheal intubation and we are well on the way to deployable robotic intubation of the trachea.13Ahmad I. Arora A. El-Boghdadly K. Embracing the robotic revolution into anaesthetic practice.Anaesthesia. 2020; 75: 848-851Crossref PubMed Scopus (7) Google Scholar These technologies subtract from the 'craft' dimension of the anaesthesiologist's traditional skill set. New drugs with shorter durations of action, cleaner profiles, and easier use and titration have simplified the mission, thus paralysis is easier to manage with atracurium than using curare or pancuronium. Sevoflurane is easier to use than halothane. Attempts by anaesthesiologists to restrain the use of 'their' drugs by emergency physicians14Newstead B. Bradburn S. Appelboam A. et al.Propofol for adult procedural sedation in a UK emergency department: safety profile in 1008 cases.Br J Anaesth. 2013; 111: 651-655Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (45) Google Scholar or nurse sedationists15Ooi M. Thomson A. Morbidity and mortality of endoscopist-directed nurse-administered propofol sedation (EDNAPS) in a tertiary referral center.Endosc Int Open. 2015; 3: E393-E397Crossref PubMed Google Scholar come across as self-interested and financially motivated rather than patient-centred and evidence-based.16Sneyd J.R. Making sense of propofol sedation for endoscopy.Br J Anaesth. 2017; 118: 6-7Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (14) Google Scholar American anaesthesiologists find their operating room practice challenged by nurse anaesthetists who appear to work as safely as their medically qualified colleagues when embedded in mixed care teams.17Sun E.C. Miller T.R. Moshfegh J. Baker L.C. Anesthesia care team composition and surgical outcomes.Anesthesiology. 2018; 129: 700-709Crossref PubMed Scopus (15) Google Scholar Liberalisation of supervisory requirements may markedly expand nurse anaesthetists' scope of practice. Non-medical anaesthesia is well established in several continental European counties,18Hedenskog C. Nilsson U. Jaensson M. Swedish-registered nurse anesthetists' evaluation of their professional self.J Perianesth Nurs. 2017; 32: 106-111Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (8) Google Scholar slowly developing in the UK,19Edwards L.D. Till A. McKimm J. Leading the integration of physician associates into the UK health workforce.Br J Hosp Med (Lond). 2019; 80: 18-21Crossref PubMed Scopus (6) Google Scholar and is routine in much of the third world. In short, the core specialty of operating room anaesthesia is under threat. What to do? What are we left with? The pandemic has been an opportunity for anaesthesiologists to showcase their skills. These skills were used successfully in the process of distributing care in the COVID-19 pandemic, both to COVID and non-COVID patients. For the moment, we have the eye of all of the hospital and much of the general public. We have a moment (arguably a brief one…) to exploit this as an opportunity to reposition our specialty for the future. Anaesthesiologists should head towards the challenges. Giving a few millilitres of propofol for sedation during colonoscopy in healthy patients is not the work of a specialist—it can be safely managed by a nurse. Anaesthesiologists are specialised generalist physicians, with extensive knowledge of the (patho)physiology of organ systems both under normal and stress conditions, and are trained to mechanically and pharmacologically influence these systems. We should use that knowledge. Likewise, within and beyond the operating rooms we should be going the 'hard yards', working as perioperative physicians managing complex patients at each stage of their perioperative journey. Anaesthesiologists, as team players with little distance between physician and non-physician care givers, as efficient planners, and controllers, should facilitate multidisciplinary collaborations outside the operating room. If anaesthesia is going to redefine its position (as it must), then it all has to be earned, none of it will be given. The failure of the 'Perioperative Surgical Home' concept attempted by the ASA is something to learn from. If surgeons and administrators are going to share leadership of perioperative care with anaesthesiologists, in its broadest sense, then it will be because we have demonstrated that it is the way to produce better quality patient care (measurably), cheaper care, faster care, and more satisfying (to all parties) care. No one else is going to do this for us. Recently, the European Society of Anaesthesiologists announced a name change to embrace intensive care and is now in the preliminary skirmishes of a battle with the European Society of Intensive Care Medicine. (www.esahq.org/esa-news/esa-2020-general-assembly-message-from-the-presidents/). The outcome of such boundary disputes will be resolved by evidence and not by rhetoric. Intensive care was once an anaesthesiologist's hegemony, but those days are long gone. If anaesthesiologists are to call ourselves intensivists and perioperative physicians then we have to earn the right to do so by generating respect from our colleagues in medicine, surgery, and management. The scope and versatility that anaesthesiologists have demonstrated during the COVID-19 pandemic has to become daily routine practice. We can take responsibility for healthcare delivery processes and use our broad knowledge outside operating room care and planning. In that sense, the COVID-19 pandemic should be a wake–up call. If we respond, we can stand on the shoulders of iconic anaesthesiologists such as John Snow and Bjørn Ibsen who took on responsibilities outside the operating room during the cholera and polio pandemics to define the specialty.20Ortega R. Chen R. Beyond the operating room: the roles of anaesthesiologists in pandemics.Br J Anaesth. June 11 2020; https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bja.2020.06.005Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (7) Google Scholar Conception: WK Writing of the draft: WK, MH, JRS Revision of the manuscript: WK, MH, JRS Approved the final version of the manuscript: all authors The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest.