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Percentages of Cases in Operating Rooms of Sufficient Duration to Accommodate a 30-Minute Breast Milk Pumping Session by Anesthesia Residents or Nurse Anesthetists

Introduction: Accommodating breast milk pumping sessions is required by US federal statute, but fulfillment is challenging for US anesthesia providers (e.g., anesthesia residents and nurse anesthetists). Considerations of good anesthesia practices (e.g., being present for critical portions of cases,...

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Autores principales: Titler, Sarah, Dexter, Franklin, Epstein, Richard H
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cureus 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7863080/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33564523
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.12519
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author Titler, Sarah
Dexter, Franklin
Epstein, Richard H
author_facet Titler, Sarah
Dexter, Franklin
Epstein, Richard H
author_sort Titler, Sarah
collection PubMed
description Introduction: Accommodating breast milk pumping sessions is required by US federal statute, but fulfillment is challenging for US anesthesia providers (e.g., anesthesia residents and nurse anesthetists). Considerations of good anesthesia practices (e.g., being present for critical portions of cases, including induction and emergence) create limits on which procedures are suitable for such relief. Our objective was to quantify the minimum percentages of cases for which there could reliably (≥ 95%) be at least 30 minutes during the surgical time when the anesthesia provider could receive such breaks. Methods: We studied all surgical cases performed at an anesthesia department over four years, including its inpatient surgical suite, pediatric hospital, and ambulatory surgery center. The 5% lower prediction bounds of surgical times (surgery or procedure start to end) were calculated from three years of historical data (October 1, 2016, to September 30, 2019) based on two-parameter lognormal distributions. The prediction bounds were compared to actual surgical start times during the next one year (October 1, 2019, to September 30, 2020). We considered the interval available for a breast milk pumping session during a case to be from 15 minutes after the start of the surgical time (to allow completion of initial documentation, other activities, and hand-off to the relieving anesthesia provider) until the end of the surgical time. Results: The lower prediction bounds were accurate, with 4.9% (4.6% - 5.2%) of future cases’ surgical times being briefer, matching the nominal 5.0% rate. Applying these bounds, approximately 39% of cases (99% confidence interval 39% - 40%) were reliably of sufficient duration for the anesthesia provider delivering care in that one operating room to receive a 30-minute break for breast milk pumping session between 15 minutes after the start of surgery and procedure end. This percentage (39%) was substantially less than the 72% of the surgical times that were observed, in retrospect, to be sufficiently long because the lower 5% prediction bounds accounted correctly for the uncertainty in the duration of each case. The observed 39% prevalence was significantly fewer than half the cases (P < 0.0001 vs. 50%) suitable for such relief. Conclusions: Individuals making operating room assignments for anesthesia providers need to consider the 5% lower prediction bounds of surgical times for cases in the room when making such assignments for women who require time for breast milk pumping sessions. Such considerations will generally result in assignments to rooms with one or more long-duration cases. Such a strategy may involve changes in preferred assignments for the anesthesia providers and alteration in the order of rotations for anesthesia residents (e.g., palliative care rotation rather than transition to practice at a pediatric ambulatory surgery center). When making room assignments for anesthesia providers who are breastfeeding, our results show that the 5% lower prediction bounds of surgical times need to be calculated; relying on the average surgical times for procedures is insufficient. Our paper also shows how to perform the mathematics using a spreadsheet program or equivalent.
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spelling pubmed-78630802021-02-08 Percentages of Cases in Operating Rooms of Sufficient Duration to Accommodate a 30-Minute Breast Milk Pumping Session by Anesthesia Residents or Nurse Anesthetists Titler, Sarah Dexter, Franklin Epstein, Richard H Cureus Anesthesiology Introduction: Accommodating breast milk pumping sessions is required by US federal statute, but fulfillment is challenging for US anesthesia providers (e.g., anesthesia residents and nurse anesthetists). Considerations of good anesthesia practices (e.g., being present for critical portions of cases, including induction and emergence) create limits on which procedures are suitable for such relief. Our objective was to quantify the minimum percentages of cases for which there could reliably (≥ 95%) be at least 30 minutes during the surgical time when the anesthesia provider could receive such breaks. Methods: We studied all surgical cases performed at an anesthesia department over four years, including its inpatient surgical suite, pediatric hospital, and ambulatory surgery center. The 5% lower prediction bounds of surgical times (surgery or procedure start to end) were calculated from three years of historical data (October 1, 2016, to September 30, 2019) based on two-parameter lognormal distributions. The prediction bounds were compared to actual surgical start times during the next one year (October 1, 2019, to September 30, 2020). We considered the interval available for a breast milk pumping session during a case to be from 15 minutes after the start of the surgical time (to allow completion of initial documentation, other activities, and hand-off to the relieving anesthesia provider) until the end of the surgical time. Results: The lower prediction bounds were accurate, with 4.9% (4.6% - 5.2%) of future cases’ surgical times being briefer, matching the nominal 5.0% rate. Applying these bounds, approximately 39% of cases (99% confidence interval 39% - 40%) were reliably of sufficient duration for the anesthesia provider delivering care in that one operating room to receive a 30-minute break for breast milk pumping session between 15 minutes after the start of surgery and procedure end. This percentage (39%) was substantially less than the 72% of the surgical times that were observed, in retrospect, to be sufficiently long because the lower 5% prediction bounds accounted correctly for the uncertainty in the duration of each case. The observed 39% prevalence was significantly fewer than half the cases (P < 0.0001 vs. 50%) suitable for such relief. Conclusions: Individuals making operating room assignments for anesthesia providers need to consider the 5% lower prediction bounds of surgical times for cases in the room when making such assignments for women who require time for breast milk pumping sessions. Such considerations will generally result in assignments to rooms with one or more long-duration cases. Such a strategy may involve changes in preferred assignments for the anesthesia providers and alteration in the order of rotations for anesthesia residents (e.g., palliative care rotation rather than transition to practice at a pediatric ambulatory surgery center). When making room assignments for anesthesia providers who are breastfeeding, our results show that the 5% lower prediction bounds of surgical times need to be calculated; relying on the average surgical times for procedures is insufficient. Our paper also shows how to perform the mathematics using a spreadsheet program or equivalent. Cureus 2021-01-06 /pmc/articles/PMC7863080/ /pubmed/33564523 http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.12519 Text en Copyright © 2021, Titler et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Anesthesiology
Titler, Sarah
Dexter, Franklin
Epstein, Richard H
Percentages of Cases in Operating Rooms of Sufficient Duration to Accommodate a 30-Minute Breast Milk Pumping Session by Anesthesia Residents or Nurse Anesthetists
title Percentages of Cases in Operating Rooms of Sufficient Duration to Accommodate a 30-Minute Breast Milk Pumping Session by Anesthesia Residents or Nurse Anesthetists
title_full Percentages of Cases in Operating Rooms of Sufficient Duration to Accommodate a 30-Minute Breast Milk Pumping Session by Anesthesia Residents or Nurse Anesthetists
title_fullStr Percentages of Cases in Operating Rooms of Sufficient Duration to Accommodate a 30-Minute Breast Milk Pumping Session by Anesthesia Residents or Nurse Anesthetists
title_full_unstemmed Percentages of Cases in Operating Rooms of Sufficient Duration to Accommodate a 30-Minute Breast Milk Pumping Session by Anesthesia Residents or Nurse Anesthetists
title_short Percentages of Cases in Operating Rooms of Sufficient Duration to Accommodate a 30-Minute Breast Milk Pumping Session by Anesthesia Residents or Nurse Anesthetists
title_sort percentages of cases in operating rooms of sufficient duration to accommodate a 30-minute breast milk pumping session by anesthesia residents or nurse anesthetists
topic Anesthesiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7863080/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33564523
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.12519
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