Patient characteristics, anaesthetic workload and techniques in the UK: an analysis from the 7th National Audit Project (NAP7) activity survey.

Andrew David Kane, Jasmeet Soar, Richard Armstrong, Emira Kursumovic, M.T. Davies, FC Oglesby, Laura Cortes, Christine Taylor, Iain Moppett, AGARWAL SEEMA, Jeremy Cordingley, J Dorey, Simon Finney, Gudrun Kunst, Dominique Nuala Lucas, G Nickols, Ronelle Mouton, Jerry Nolan, B Patel, John PappachanF Plaat, Barnaby R Scholefield, J.H. Smith, L Varney, timothy cook*, RECOVERY-RS collaborators

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle (Academic Journal)peer-review

59 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Detailed contemporary knowledge of the characteristics of the surgical population, national anaesthetic workload, anaesthetic techniques and behaviours are essential to monitor productivity, inform policy and direct research themes. Every 3-4 years, the Royal College of Anaesthetists, as part of its National Audit Projects (NAP), performs a snapshot activity survey in all UK hospitals delivering anaesthesia, collecting patient-level encounter data from all cases under the care of an anaesthetist. During November 2021, as part of NAP7, anaesthetists recorded details of all cases undertaken over 4 days at their site through an online survey capturing anonymous patient characteristics and anaesthetic details. Of 416 hospital sites invited to participate, 352 (85%) completed the activity survey. From these, 24,177 reports were returned, of which 24,172 (99%) were included in the final dataset. The work patterns by day of the week, time of day and surgical specialty were similar to previous NAP activity surveys. However, in non-obstetric patients, between NAP5 (2013) and NAP7 (2021) activity surveys, the estimated median age of patients increased by 2.3 years from median (IQR) of 50.5 (28.4-69.1) to 52.8 (32.1-69.2) years. The median (IQR) BMI increased from 24.9 (21.5-29.5) to 26.7 (22.3-31.7) kg.m-2 . The proportion of patients who scored as ASA physical status 1 decreased from 37% in NAP5 to 24% in NAP7. The use of total intravenous anaesthesia increased from 8% of general anaesthesia cases to 26% between NAP5 and NAP7. Some changes may reflect the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the anaesthetic population, though patients with confirmed COVID-19 accounted for only 149 (1%) cases. These data show a rising burden of age, obesity and comorbidity in patients requiring anaesthesia care, likely to impact UK peri-operative services significantly.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to) 701-711
Number of pages11
JournalAnaesthesia
Volume78
Issue number6
Early online date1 Mar 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 4 May 2023

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
The project infrastructure is supported financially and with staffing from the Royal College of Anaesthetists. The NAP7 fellows' salaries are generously supported by: South Tees Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust (AK); Royal United Hospitals, Bath (EK); NIHR Academic Clinical Fellowship (RA). Panel members receive travel expenses and no remuneration. JS and TC's employers receive backfill for their time on the project (4 hours per week). IM and SA are Editors of . We thank J. Pandit, H. Kemp, S. Marinho, M. Sury, N. Harper, J. Palmer for their contributions to the NAP5 and NAP6 activity surveys. No other conflicts of interest declared. Anaesthesia

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The Authors. Anaesthesia published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Association of Anaesthetists.

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