Anesthesiology And Nursing
Who would have thought that a small carbon based organic compound such as
ether
would spawn a new field of medical specializations, changing the
history of
medicine for ever. Ether was discovered in 1275 by a Spanish
chemist named
Raymundus Lullius,(Evans,1995,p 1). It was his discovery
that allowed William E.
Clark to use ether as an anesthetic for the first
time in 1842. He administered
the ether on a dental patient for Elijah Pope
as he performed a dental
extraction on Miss Hobbie,(Evans,1995.p 1). This was
the first step in the
creation of the field of anesthesia. This new
technology was quickly put to use
to relieve pain in all areas of medicine,
and its use was seen in hospital
operating rooms, dentists' offices and
battle fields. This new practice in
medicine was primarily taken on by the
physicians of that time. This new method
added to a doctors routine of
operating on patients, this proved to be to taxing
on the doctor as well as
their patients. The added burden of administering the
anesthetics along with
doing the operation and resuscitation of the patient
safely was too much for
the doctors. This fact was proven by the increase in
mortality rates of
patients put under by doctors who administered their own
anesthetic. The
increasing mortality rates forced the medical proffesion to
demanded a change
in how anesthesia was given. It was thought that the person
administering the
anesthetic should do that and only that during an operation.
This would
free up the physicians so that they could concentrate on the
operation at
hand. The remaining question was, who do we get to administer the
anesthesia?
This person would have already be trained in some aspect of the
medical field
and demonstrate good critical thought and good cognitive
reasoning. The
doctors only needed to look up from the operating table and to
their
assistants in health care CRNA 3 to get their answer, it was the
nurse.
From that moment on the first specialization in clinical nursing
was born and
those in that specialty were named nurse
anesthetists,(Thatcher,1952,p11). The
earliest documentation of anesthetic
care given to a patient by a nurse was the
work done by Sister Mary Bernard
in 1887. She was a catholic nun who worked at
the St. Vincent hospital in
Erie Pennsylvania,(Thatcher,1952,p 12). The nurse
anesthetists of that time
were trained by physicians at first, but as time went
on the nurses took a
more active role in the study and research of anesthetics
and eventually
surpassed their teachers in the field of anesthesiology. This
advance led to
role reversal, where the teacher became the student and the
student became
the teacher. By 1909 the first formal educational program
designed for nurse
anesthetists was started at St. Vincents Hospital in
Portland
Oregon,(Evans,1995,p 3). Upon graduation from the school, the
nurse anesthetists
were placed in all sorts of settings. Most impressive were
the teaching
positions held by nurses in the medical schools of that time.
They became the
primary instructors of anesthetic to medical students. The
nurse anesthetist
also held positions in the battlefields. During World War
One, the American
nurse anesthetist was the primary health giver to troops in
the European
theaters of combat. While at war the American nurses influenced
other foreign
nurses and that led to the spread of nurse anesthetists
throughout the world.
With the wars came a sharp increase in the demand
of anesthetists, and this in
turn increased the number of institutions needed
for training and broadened the
criteria for educating the nurses. By the end
of war it was evident that the
nurse anesthetist was an invaluable profession
that had established itself as
one of the most important of all in medicine.
With all of this growth and
evolution it became necessary that the profession
of nurse anesthetists needed
to have some structure and governance. On June
17, 1931 the American Association
of Nurse Anesthetists CRNA 4 (AANA),
wasformed and held its first meeting. From
that point on the nurse
anesthetist had a new name, they were also known as
Certified Registered
Nurse Anesthetist, (CRNA). Up until World War Two,
anesthesia was considered
a nursing specialty. This fact was credited in 1942
..
...when
the ratio of CRNA's to anesthesiologists(M.D.) was seventeen to one.
Those
statistics stayed relatively the same until the sixties,(Evans,1995,p
3). The
construction of criteria and guidelines for CRNA programs has been
the
responsibility of the AANA and government organizations. Together they
also
created the criteria that was necessary for schools to follow to keep
their
accreditation and licensure of practicing anesthetists,(AANA,1998,p 3).
The CRNA
of today is not much different than their counterparts that
practiced in the
late eightteen hundreds and early nineteen hundreds. One
noticeable difference
between the CRNA's of today and those of yesteryear is
the constantly changing
technologies and new developments in the drugs
available to them. Along with new
advances came the need for additional
schooling and training. The new demands
put on training institutions assured
that only the best and most qualified
nurses be accepted into the CRNA
programs. The schooling required by nurses in
this field is a rigorous and
challenging set of didactic and clinical classes
that can last twenty four to
thirty six months with little or no breaks. The
criteria for entrance into
most accredited schools is strict. Most require a GPA
of 3.00 to
3.50,(UNE,1996,p6), previous experience in an ICU ward and a
bachelors of
science in nursing. The degrees that can be earned in anesthesia
are CRNA, Ed
in anesthesiology or a doctorate degree, (Evans,1995,p3). Due to
the current
trends in health care and demands for highly qualified CRNA's in the
work
place, all accredited school must offer a masters of CRNA program as
a
mandatory degree by CRNA 5 the end of1998,(Evans,1995,p4). To this date
there
are some twenty seven thousand CRNA's in practice in the United States
alone and
that number is constantly growing,(AANA,1998,p 1). Timothy Gale is
one out of
the twenty seven thousand CRNA's in the U.S. and is presently
employed at the
Aroostook Medical Center. He received his CRNA degree in
1992 from the Eastern
Maine Medical Center. He loves his profession and
the esteem that comes with it.
He is among the CRNA's that administered
65% of the 26 million anesthetics given
to patients last year,(AANA,1998,p
1). These anesthetics were given in a wide
array of settings that range from
dentists offices to hospital operating rooms
to training facilities. Tim also
described his work in a hospital environment as
very rewarding and
challenging. The autonomy given to CRNA's is an important
part of the job to
him. Not all CRNA's are granted the same levels of autonomy
as others. It all
depends on previous performance and competency, luckily Tim is
competent
enough to be left alone in his job. Looking at CRNA's from an
economical
aspect, they make perfect fedutiary sense. When comparing the
salaries of
CRNA's to MD's that give anesthetics the difference is quit
staggering. A
CRNA makes about 70-100 thousand dollars a year compared to the
250+
thousand dollars a year that the MD makes,(ANA,1997,p3). The Health
Care
Financing Administration launched a study of the job performances
and pay scales
of CRNA's and MD's. They discovered that the quality of care
between the two was
the same(AANA/NOTICES,1998,p1). This led the HCFA to work
with the U.S. Congress
to help change the rules allowing CRNA's absolute
freedom from physician
supervision while administering anesthetics. The U.S.
Congress has even sat up
and CRNA 6 taken note of the value of qualified
CRNA's and, they unanimously
support more autonomy for the CRNA. They believe
that if CRNA's can be
reimbursed by Medicaid and Medicare and be expected to
go to war for the U.S.,
then should be autonomous,(AANA/NOTICES,1998,p1). The
future of the CRNA looks
as bright and prosperous as its past has been. As
hospitals and government keep
trimming the fat in medical care the more cost
effective CRNA's will gain more
ground as an independent source of quality
care. The schooling that CRNA's go
through will keep evolving to the demands
of the field. The demand for higher
qualities in applicants to these schools
will rise as the medical community
demands more bang for its buck. I am
excited that I have chosen this field to be
my future specialty and look
forward to the challenges that lay before
me.