Clinical anesthesia
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Clinical anesthesia · Jan 1976
Transportation and emergency care. Emergency assessment and management.
An organized approach for the management of the multiply injured patient has been presented. Adequate equipment and ancillary facilities support patient care. The principles of airway management, treatment of shock, and specific organ injuries have been described. More than one surgical discipline may work on a patient simultaneously; however, one physician, preferably the trauma surgeon or general surgeon, is in charge and coordinates the consultative care.
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Since the first report in 1846 on the use of anesthesia for a surgical procedure, deaths have occurred with practically every agent and technique used. Those mishaps of which we are aware are probably just a small segment of those that have actually occurred, since presently there is no widely used method for identifying anesthesia-associated deaths. Several sources of information are available, including the United States National Center for Health Statistics and articles in the medical literature. ⋯ Extrapolating from data from community anesthesia study committees and from population and operative figures, we can estimate that there are over 5,000 deaths associated with anesthesia in this country each year. This is 3 times as many as are caused by muscular dystrophy and multiple sclerosis, 15 times as many as with sickle cell anemia, 20 times as many as with myasthenia gravis and 40 times as many with poliomyelitis. We thus must recognize that anesthesia is an iatrogenic disease that deserves serious attention as a public health problem.