Immediate Post Anesthetic Recovery
Immediate Post Anesthetic Recovery
Immediate Post Anesthetic Recovery
Published by
The Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland,
21 Portland Place, London W1B 1PY
Telephone: 020 7631 1650, Fax: 020 7631 4352
E-mail: [email protected] Website: www.aagbi.org September 2002
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Ex Officio
Professor Leo Strunin President
Dr Peter G M Wallace President Elect
Dr David J Wilkinson Honorary Treasurer
Dr Bob W Buckland Honorary Secretary
Dr David K Whitaker Assistant Honorary Secretary
Dr Michael E Ward Honorary Membership Secretary
Professor Michael Harmer Editor, Anaesthesia
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Contents
Membership of working party
Key recommendations
Preface
1. The recovery facility
2. Equipment and drugs
3. Recovery room staff
4. Transferring a patient from the operating theatre to the recovery room
5. Management of patients in the recovery room
6. Discharging a patient from the recovery room
7. Local anaesthesia
8. Children
9. Patients’ perspective
10. Recovery in special areas
11. Critically ill patients
12. Care of the dying patient
13. Audit
References
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Key recommendations
1. After general, epidural or spinal anaesthesia, all patients should be recovered
in a specially designated area which complies with the standards and
recommendations described in this document.
2. The anaesthetist must formally hand over care of a patient to a recovery room
nurse or other appropriately trained member of staff.
3. Agreed criteria for discharge of patients from the recovery room to the ward
should be in place in all units.
4. An effective emergency call system must be in place in every recovery room.
5. No fewer than two staff should be present when there is a patient in the recovery
room who does not fulfil the criteria for discharge to the ward.
6. All specialist recovery staff should be appropriately trained, ideally to a
nationally recognised standard.
7. All patients must be observed on a one-to-one basis by an anaesthetist, recovery
nurse or other appropriately trained member of staff until they have regained
airway control and cardiovascular stability and are able to communicate.
8. The removal of tracheal tubes from patients in the recovery room is the
responsibility of the anaesthetist.
9. There should be a specially designated area for the recovery of children.
10. All standards and recommendations described in this document should be applied
to all recovery areas where anaesthesia is administered including obstetric,
cardiology, X-ray, dental and psychiatric units and community hospitals.
11. Patient dignity and privacy should be considered at all times.
12. When critically ill patients are managed in the recovery room because of bed
shortages, the primary responsibility for the patient lies with the critical care
team. The standard of nursing and medical care should be equal to that within
the critical care unit.
13. Audit and critical incident systems should be in place in all recovery rooms.
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system must be in place with alarm and telephone or intercom links to operating 3. Recovery room staff
theatres and rest areas. All members of staff must be aware of this system and it
should be tested at least weekly. No fewer than two staff should be present when there is a patient in the recovery
There should be access to a staff rest area near to, but outside, the immediate recovery room who does not fulfil the criteria for discharge to the ward. At such times,
area. Other facilities should include toilets, showers, clean duty clothes and secure there should be an anaesthetist, supernumerary to requirements in the operating
storage for personal possessions. Patient and staff safety should be assured by theatres, immediately available for the recovery room. Dedicated anaesthetic
appropriate security systems, especially at night. sessions in the recovery room should be considered in large busy units.
The provision of a satisfactory quality of care during recovery from anaesthesia and
2. Equipment and drugs surgery relies heavily on investment in the education and training of recovery room
staff. Maintenance of standards requires continuous update, e.g. resuscitation skills,
An appropriate standard of monitoring should be maintained until the patient is fully application of new techniques, advances in pain management. Recovery room staff
recovered from anaesthesia [5]. Clinical observation should be supplemented by a are specialists and often play a key role in the education of others, including other
minimum of pulse oximetry and non-invasive blood pressure monitoring. An ECG, theatre staff, ward-based nurses, midwives and trainee doctors.
nerve stimulator, thermometer and capnograph should be immediately available.
All specialist staff should have received appropriate training, ideally to a nationally
Ideally, there should be compatibility between operating theatre, recovery room
recognised standard. Training should be tailored to meet the needs of the individual
and ward equipment.
and recovery room but practical training and maintenance of skills must supplement
All drugs, equipment, fluids and algorithms required for resuscitation and management theoretical knowledge.
of anaesthetic and surgical complications should be immediately available.
Core skills include:
i. Assessment of vital signs and overall patient status and initiation of
management leading to their improvement.
ii. Competence in all aspects of basic life support. At all times, at least one
member of staff should be a certified ALS provider and, for children, hold an
appropriate paediatric life support qualification. All staff should be encouraged
to attain and maintain at least one ‘provider’ qualification.
iii. Assessment of fluid balance and management of intravenous infusions.
iv. Intravenous administration of appropriate drugs.
v. Administration of analgesics, anti-emetics and other drugs by all appropriate
routes and use of associated equipment. This should be guided by local protocols.
vi. Initiation of appropriate investigations, often using local protocols.
Continued professional development and the training of other staff is facilitated
by activities such as the establishment of lead practitioners in certain areas (e.g.
pain relief, life support, infection control, liaison with ward staff, health and safety
matters), a training co-ordinator, rotation of duties with the local high dependency
unit (HDU) and/or critical care unit (CCU), an audit programme and teaching
displays, journal clubs and tutorials.
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4. Transferring a patient to the recovery room 5. Management of patients in the recovery room
The transfer of patients from the operating theatre to recovery room and elsewhere Patients must be observed on a one-to-one basis by an anaesthetist, recovery
has been considered in two publications by the Association of Anaesthetists [5,6]. nurse or other properly trained member of staff until they have regained airway
Before transfer, the anaesthetist should be satisfied that the recovery staff are control and cardiovascular stability and are able to communicate. This
competent and able to take responsibility for the patient. If this cannot be assured, recommendation is paramount and must be observed, even if it causes delay in the
the anaesthetist should stay with the patient, either in the operating theatre or recovery throughput of patients. All recovery rooms must be staffed to a level which allows
room, until the patient is fit to return to the ward. It is essential for the anaesthetist this to be routine practice, even in times of peak activity. Life-threatening
to formally hand over care of the patient to a qualified member of the recovery complications occur during this period and failure to provide adequate care may
room staff. prove catastrophic for the patient and result in serious medico-legal consequences.
The patient should be physiologically stable on departure from the operating theatre Patients must be kept under clinical observation at all times and all measurements
and the anaesthetist must decide on the need for monitoring during transfer. This should be recorded. Ideally, this should be on a dedicated section of the anaesthetic
will depend on factors such as proximity of the recovery room, level of consciousness chart. The introduction of automatic recording systems is encouraged. The frequency
and respiratory and cardiovascular status. If the recovery room is not immediately of observations will depend on the stage of recovery, nature of surgery and clinical
adjacent to the operating theatre, or if the patient’s condition is poor, adequate condition of the patient. It should not be influenced by staffing levels. The following
mobile monitoring is required i.e. a minimum of pulse oximetry and non-invasive information should be recorded:
blood pressure with the immediate availability of an ECG, nerve stimulator, means i. level of consciousness
of measuring temperature and capnograph [5]. The anaesthetist is responsible for
ii. haemoglobin oxygen saturation and oxygen administration
ensuring that this transfer is accomplished safely.
iii. blood pressure
Supplemental oxygen should be administered to all patients during transfer.
iv. respiratory frequency
v. heart rate and rhythm
vi. pain intensity e.g. verbal rating scale (none, mild, moderate, severe)
vii. intravenous infusions
viii. drugs administered
ix. other parameters (depending on circumstances) e.g. temperature, urinary
output, central venous pressure, end-tidal CO2, surgical drainage.
For all patients, the name, hospital number, time of admission, time of discharge
and destination should be recorded in a central register.
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