Canadian journal of anaesthesia = Journal canadien d'anesthésie
-
Women continue to be underrepresented in academic anesthesiology, especially in leadership positions. Possible reasons for this gender disparity include family responsibilities, inadequate mentorship, lack of desire for leadership, the leaky pipeline effect (i.e., attrition of women physicians over the course of their career trajectories), and discrimination. Our objective was to understand the lived experiences of Canadian anesthesiologists in leadership positions. ⋯ We identified consistent interconnected themes among the experiences of our sample of women anesthesiologists in academic leadership and found that academic anesthesiology is a gendered profession as experienced by these women leaders. Further research should focus on strategies to remove barriers to participation in academic anesthesiology for women.
-
We sought to quantify the severity and duration of hypoxemic events in morbidly obese patients during outpatient endoscopy procedures performed under deep sedation. ⋯ The incidence of severe hypoxemia increased nearly six-fold in obese patients and 8.5-fold in class III obese patients when compared with those of normal BMI. Intravenous fentanyl was associated with intraoperative hypoxemia independent of BMI. Patients who represent the highest risk for hypoxia should be stratified to procedure locations with adequate resources for the safest care.