Weight is supposed to be documented and is actually required by insurance companies for reimbursement to providers. As far as the anesthesiologist goes, it is my understanding that an anesthesiologist has to be present in the facility and review patient's history etc. Anesthetists actually administer the anesthesia and are present in the OR the entire time.
Somebody was not paying attention. Vital signs are documented typically at least every 5 minutes. KZ can speak to this much better. There seems to be such gross negligence in this case it is mind boggling. IMO
BBM. I've been a CRNA for nearly 20 years, and have worked "independently" (no MDA) in free standing surgery centers, hospitals, office based practice, etc. I haven't worked with an anesthesiologist since I was in graduate school. Any requirement in any facility for an "on site" anesthesiologist is a
local, facility specific requirement. Medicare (CMS), the VA, insurance companies, JCAH, and state inspectors do not require this. CRNA practice is outlined in the Nurse Practice Act (by law) in each of the 50 states. In my state, I am required to be licensed as an RN,
also state licensed separately as an APRN (Advanced Practice Registered Nurse), as well as certified nationally.
Each facility determines what their ratio of CRNAs to MDAs will be, and what roles each have. Some facilities choose to have both CRNAs and MDAs in an "anesthesia care team", others have only CRNAs, and others have only MDAs. (There is another category of provider called Anesthesiologist Assistant, but they are confined to working with MDA's in the room constantly, and only in a few states.) Staffing patterns vary widely across the U.S. depending on the size of the facility, urban vs rural, and the staffing patterns predominant in that state.
That said, it appears there
was just one female physician anesthesiologist present
providing (not just "supervising") the anesthetic during JR's procedures at the outpatient endo center. That individual will have to answer a lot of very direct, potentially difficult questions, once this case is filed and moving thru the civil system, IMO.
IMHO, this is a disaster that didn't have to happen. Very sad.