The California Society of Anesthesiologists, like the American Society for Anesthesiologists, is an advocate for all patients who require anesthesia or relief from pain. The ASA states, "Anesthesiologists are considered the medical experts in patient safety before, during and following surgical and diagnostic procedures." The California Society of Anesthesiologists wishes to further patients' understanding about the practice of anesthesiology and what to expect while under an anesthesiologist's care.
The CSA especially encourages all patients to visit the ASA's Web siteLifeline to Modern Medicine, which contains relevant and important information regaring anesthesia safety, including patient stories, a video library, news articles, and patient FAQs.
Patients may also find the following Web resources helpful:
Lifeline to Modern Medicine: ASA Trauma Care Video
The American Society of Anesthesiologists
Who is Providing Anesthesia?
When Seconds Count...Physician Anesthesiologists Save Lives.™
Choosing an Anesthesiologist
Anesthesiologists: Physicians Specializing in the Patient Experience
Physician Anesthesiologists Do More Than Just “Put You to Sleep”
Anesthesia Care Team
What's the difference? Anesthesiology Assistant versus Nurse Anesthetist
FAQ: Should nurses be able to practice independently? The importance of anesthesia training
Nurses Are Not Doctors (Anesthesiologists Are)
Anesthesiologists as 'Air Traffic Controllers of the OR'
It's not by drugs alone that physician anesthesiologists can reduce patient anxiety and make them feel good about their experience in the hospital. Patient education provided by these specialists is beginning to show improvement on an important key indicator for at least one hospital: patient satisfaction.
Preparing for a Procedure Requiring Anesthesia
What to Do Before Given Anesthesia
10 Questions to Ask Before Anesthesia
Having Surgery? Here's How to Manage Your Medications
Your Stay in the ICU: What Patients and Families Should Know About Intensive Care After Surgery
What You Don't Know About Pain Can Hurt You
Anesthesia Risk Assessment Tool
Drs. Lynnus Peng and John MacCarthy have developed a helpful Anesthesia Risk Assessment tool that can help you determine what questions you should ask your anesthesiologist before your surgery.
Patient's Checklist for Office-Based Procedures
Handy checklist from the Institute for Safety in Office-Based Procedures. Learn what to ask before having an office-based procedure.
Patients Suffering from Chronic Pain Should Question Certain Tests and Treatments
A list of five targeted, evidence-based recommendations that can support conversations between patients and physician anesthesiologists about what care is really necessary, released by ASA as part of the ABIM Foundation's Choose Wisely campaign.
Spinal Anesthesia Offers Many Benefits for Surgery
Cardiac
10 Things To Know About Anesthesia And Heart Surgery
Obstetric
Q&A on Preeclampsia and Developmental Delay
How Pregnant Moms Can Help Catch Preeclampsia
Laboring Under Misconceptions: Epidural Myths May Keep Women from Reliable Pain Management
Epidurals and Reduced Postpartum Depression: An Interview with CSA's Dr. Mark Zakowski
How to Recover Quickly and Avoid Chronic Pain After a C-Section
Managing Pregnancy-Related Complications: An Interview With CSA Member Dr. Mark Zakowski
Study Suggests Misplaced Fears in Longer Childbirths, Feb 05
Pediatric
What Parents Should Know Before Their Child Has Surgery
Parents and Their Doctors Should Consider How Urgently Surgery Is Required for Children Younger Than 3 Years
Pain Medicine
Women's Pain Update (Infographic)
Health Coverage/Insurance
Covered California
Frequently Asked Patient Questions About Covered California
Patient Awareness
The ASA Patient Awareness brochure explains anesthesiologist's ongoing efforts to deal with the very rare condition of unintended patient awareness under general anesthesia.
ASA video about patient awareness (also refered to as intraoperative awareness)
The 2006 CSA House of Delegates adopted the following:
CSA Statement on Intraoperative Awareness
The CSA expresses its concern for any patient who experiences awareness under general anesthesia. While such awareness is a rare event, it is an area of discussion in the public arena. It is the intent of the CSA to educate and inform our patients and the public on the issue of intraoperative awareness in a straightforward manner.
Anesthesiologists are trained to minimize the occurrence of awareness under general anesthesia. It is recognized that on rare occasions, usually associated with a patient's critical condition, this may be unavoidable. Furthermore, it is commonplace in contemporary anesthetic practice to employ a variety of techniques using regional nerve blocks and varying degrees of sedation. Patients often do not make a distinction between these techniques and general anesthesia, yet awareness is often expected and anticipated with the former. This may have led to a misunderstanding of "awareness" during surgery by many patients.
Educación pública: La anestesia y usted...
(Se reimprimiá con la autorización de: Sociedad Texas de Anestesiólogos y Sociedad Americana de Anestesiólogos)
In addition, the CSA has obtained permission from the Texas Society of Anesthesiologists and the ASA to reprint several of the patient education papers that have been prepared in Spanish. You may access these papers below.