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Published in: Perioperative Medicine 1/2017

Open Access 01-12-2017 | Research

Are physician assistant and patient airway assessments reliable compared to anesthesiologist assessments in detecting difficult airways in general surgical patients?

Authors: Erin Payne, Jacqueline Ragheb, Elizabeth S. Jewell, Betsy P. Huang, Angela M. Bailey, Laura M. Fritsch, Milo Engoren

Published in: Perioperative Medicine | Issue 1/2017

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Abstract

Background

Airway management remains one of the most important responsibilities of anesthesiologists. Prediction of difficult airway allows time for proper selection of equipment, technique, and personnel experienced in managing patients with difficult airway. Face to face preoperative anesthesia interviews are difficult to conduct as they necessitate patients traveling to the clinics, and, in practice, are usually conducted in the morning of the procedure by the anesthesiologist, when identification of predictors of difficult intubation may lead to schedule delays or case cancelations. We hypothesized that an airway assessment tool could be used by patients or physician assistants to accurately assess their airways.

Methods

We administered an airway assessment tool, which had been constructed in consultation with a psychometrician and revised after non-medical layperson feedback, to 215 patients presenting to the preoperative clinic for evaluation. Separately, patients had the airway exam performed by a physician assistant and an anesthesiologist. Agreement was compared using kappa.

Results

We found good agreement between observers only on “can you put three fingers in your mouth?” (three-way kappa = .733, p < 0.001) and poor agreement on Mallampati classification (three-way kappa = .195, p < 0.001) and “Can you fit three fingers between your chin and your Adam’s Apple?” (three-way kappa = .216, p < 0.001). The agreements for the other questions were mostly fair. Agreements between patients and anesthesiologists were similar to those between physician assistants and anesthesiologists.

Conclusions

Neither the patients’ self-assessments nor the physician assistants’ assessments were adequate to substitute for the anesthesiologists’ airway assessments.
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Metadata
Title
Are physician assistant and patient airway assessments reliable compared to anesthesiologist assessments in detecting difficult airways in general surgical patients?
Authors
Erin Payne
Jacqueline Ragheb
Elizabeth S. Jewell
Betsy P. Huang
Angela M. Bailey
Laura M. Fritsch
Milo Engoren
Publication date
01-12-2017
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
Perioperative Medicine / Issue 1/2017
Electronic ISSN: 2047-0525
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13741-017-0077-0

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