Chapter 17: Guidelines for the Provision of Anaesthesia Services for Burn and Plastics Surgery 2024

Published: 31/01/2023

Introduction

The range of procedures requiring anaesthesia for burn and plastic surgery is wide and includes patients of all ages. Procedures range from common minor injuries (dog bites, nail bed injuries) to planned congenital cleft lip and palate and hand procedures, and less frequently major burns and free-flap surgeries requiring multidisciplinary perioperative critical care. The recommendations in this chapter should be read in conjunction with those for general surgery, outlined in Chapter 2, which, unless otherwise stated, still apply.

Burns

Approximately 140,000 patients sustain burn injuries each year, with approximately 10% requiring admission to hospital, of whom 50% are children. Burn care is stratified with four operational delivery networks in England and Wales and one in Scotland. Services are tiered for children and adults, following nationally agreed referral criteria, with referral to burn facilities, burn units or burn centres depending on the severity and complexity of the injury and locality. The burn care standards were revised in 2018 to allow services to be peer reviewed against agreed benchmarks for specialist infrastructure and staff.4 The recommendations in this chapter apply to all tiers of burn care services, unless otherwise stated within individual recommendations.

Anaesthetists who care for burn patients should be part of a multidisciplinary team and actively partaking in collective decision making, inputting into ward management (including dressing changes and analgesia), critical care, and multidisciplinary team meetings.

Understanding the complexity of surgery for major burns is vital. This includes the need to be prepared for massive blood loss, difficulties with monitoring and venous access, management of heat loss, prevention of thromboembolic events, and sepsis; as well as complex analgesia requirements and an understanding of the impact on the patient and their family, and the need for continuing care for many years ahead. Anaesthesia services are not confined to provision of care in a theatre or critical care environment. Provision of remote analgesia, sedation and anaesthesia comes with its own potential difficulties regarding monitoring and access to anaesthetic equipment. Services need to be able to provide care to meet standards for the admission to theatre of a patient with a major burn with little notice. Repeat and prolonged surgery for major burns is likely to continue for many weeks to months, with an impact on facilities, staff and equipment. Age appropriate services for anaesthesia and critical care must meet national and RCoA standards.

Plastic surgery

Plastic surgery describes a reconstructive procedure designed to restore form and function to the body. It covers all aspects of wound healing and reconstruction after congenital, acquired (including secondary to cancer) or traumatic tissue defects. Other common conditions that can require plastic surgery include reconstruction of large skin defects, pressure sores and other chronic wounds, venous and other leg ulcers, and the results of devastating infections. Clinicians anaesthetising for plastic surgery procedures need an understanding of the principles of free-flap surgery. Age appropriate staff and facilities are required for complex surgery for congenital conditions, including cleft palate, congenital hand deformities and trauma procedures. Prolonged procedures are common and require attention to detail regarding positioning, fluid management, blood flow and prevention of thromboembolic complications

Aesthetic surgery

Aesthetic surgery is surgery performed solely to change a person’s appearance. Where a patient is receiving anaesthesia or sedation and is under the care of an anaesthetist for this type of surgery, the recommendations in this chapter and those relating to all types of surgery in Chapter 2 still apply, regardless of the funding model of the setting.

1. Staffing Requirements

1.1

An appropriately trained and experienced anaesthetist with regular commitments to burn and plastic surgery should be present during the conduct of general and regional anaesthesia for operative procedures, including those procedures requiring intravenous sedation where it has been agreed that this will be provided by the anaesthesia department.

GPP Strong
1.2

An anaesthetist should be physically present when a general anaesthetic is administered. In exceptional circumstances, anaesthetists working singlehandedly may be called on briefly to assist with or perform a lifesaving procedure nearby. This is a matter for individual judgement, and a dedicated anaesthesia assistant should be present to monitor the unattended patient.11

C Strong
1.3

A clinical lead for burn and plastic surgery anaesthesia should be appointed in each hospital providing anaesthesia for this specialty. The clinical lead (see Glossary) anaesthetist in burn and plastic surgery units will be responsible for the provision of service, teaching, production of guidelines, management, research and audit, and should be able to support quality improvement initiatives. Sufficient time should be included in job plans to support these activities and continuing professional development (CPD) for those anaesthetists.

GPP Strong
1.4

Anaesthetists should always be supported by dedicated, appropriately skilled and trained assistants. Recovery facilities should be staffed during all operating hours and should have appropriate anaesthesia support until the patient meets agreed discharge criteria.12

C Strong
1.5

There should be adequate numbers of competent medical and non-medical staff to provide 24/7 cover for emergency burn and plastics anaesthesia.13

GPP Strong
1.6

Where a paediatric service is being provided, all medical and non-medical staff, including recovery room staff, should have relevant and recent training in paediatric anaesthesia and resuscitation.4,14,15

C Strong
1.7

There should be specific consultant or autonomously practising anaesthetist programmed activity time for burn anaesthesia in hospitals where burn surgery is undertaken.4

C Strong
1.8

An appropriately skilled or experienced stage 2 or above resident anaesthetist should be available immediately at all times. Appropriately experienced staff grade, associate specialist and specialty (SAS) doctors and on-call consultants or autonomously practising anaesthetists should also be available within 30 minutes. Where paediatric services are provided, consultant or autonomously practising paediatric anaesthetists should be available.4

C Strong
1.9

There should be sufficient programmed activity time available for anaesthetists to assess patients perioperatively and to attend multidisciplinary ward rounds.

GPP Strong
1.10

There should be sufficient programmed activity time to provide support to sedation and analgesia services for burn patients.

GPP Strong

2. Equipment, services and facilities

General equipment, services and facilities for anaesthesia are described in Chapter 2.Additional specialised recommendations for burn and plastic surgery anaesthesia are given below.

2.1

Appropriate equipment should be available to enable prone positioning of patients.16,17

C Strong

Airway and ventilation

Burns and plastic surgery patients have a higher incidence of difficult airway.

2.2

A difficult airway trolley, including the equipment necessary for failed intubation and surgical airway access, should be available.18 Appropriate specialist intubation equipment, including fibreoptic intubation equipment, should be available.19 A fibreoptic scope should be available to assess inhalational injury. 20,21,22,23,24,25

C Strong
2.3

Equipment necessary for the formation of a surgical airway, including front of neck access should be available.26,27

C Strong
2.4

Ventilators with advanced ventilatory mode functions should be available.28

GPP Strong
2.5

Burns anaesthetists should have access to and knowledge of nasendoscopy.

GPP Strong

Monitoring

Physiological monitoring can be difficult in patients with major burns, as there may be a lack of sites available for probes, cuffs and electrodes.20,29

2.6

Equipment to comply with the Association of Anaesthetists standards for anaesthetic monitoring should be available.11

C Strong
2.7

Pulse oximetry ear probes should be available.29,30

C Strong
2.8

It may be difficult to make the ECG gel electrodes adhere to damaged skin. ECG electrodes could be sited away from the chest,29 or could be attached to crocodile clips, surgical staples or steel sutures placed in burned areas.20,24,31

GPP Moderate
2.9

Invasive arterial blood pressure monitoring should be available for extensive burn debridement and major plastic surgery, to allow the benefits of continuous pressure monitoring, pulse contour analysis and ease of blood sampling.20,23,24,32

C Moderate
2.10

An arterial blood gas machine should be immediately available.

GPP Strong
2.11

Equipment for central venous pressure, core and peripheral temperature and urinary output monitoring should be available.32,33

C Strong
2.12

Equipment to measure carbon monoxide levels in blood should be available.20

GPP Strong

Equipment for delivery of anaesthesia services outside the operating room

2.13

Many burn injured patients require frequent sedation or anaesthesia for procedures outside the operating theatre. These procedures should take place in a specified location that is provided with all the equipment required for the safe delivery of anaesthesia and to meet minimum monitoring standards.5,11,34

C Strong
2.14

Equipment, such as television screens and tablet computers, for distraction during painful procedures, including dressing changes, should be considered.35,36,37

GPP Moderate

Equipment for temperature management

Intraoperative hypothermia poses a significant risk to patients undergoing both burns and plastic surgery. The combination of lengthy procedures, large exposed body areas, administration of intravenous fluids, together with a low ambient temperature, may lead to marked intraoperative hypothermia. The impact and consequences of hypothermia are serious and deleterious in this patient group, with worse overall outcomes following burns and plastic surgery. Specifically, effects can include cardiac events and impairment of coagulation resulting in increased blood loss. There is also an association with higher incidence of surgical wound infections and prolonged hospital stay, all of which may lead to higher costs associated with surgery.

It has also been observed that warmed patients have lower intraoperative analgesic requirements and shorter recovery times.38

2.15

Core and peripheral temperature monitoring equipment should be available and should be easily accessible.20,24,31

GPP Strong
2.16

Active warming equipment should be available and easily accessible, including warmed blankets for body areas not being operated on, forced air warming devices  for heating mattresses.20,24,31,33,39

C Strong
2.17

Consideration should also be given to the provision of radiant heaters and more sophisticated warming devices.20

C Strong
2.18

Warmed intravenous fluids should be available.20,33

C Strong

Thromboprophylaxis

Burn patients and patients undergoing prolonged plastic surgery are at particular risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE0).39

2.19

For burn and plastic surgery patients, mechanical methods of VTE prophylaxis, including graduated compression stockings, intermittent pneumatic compression devices and venous foot pumps should be available for any procedure that lasts more than one hour, and for all patients receiving general anaesthesia.33,41

C Strong

Blood transfusion

Debridement of major burns has the potential for significant blood loss.

2.20

Equipment for blood transfusion should be available, including rapid transfusion devices.

C Strong
2.21

Point of care testing for coagulation and haemoglobin, including thromboelastometry, could be considered to allow targeted use of blood products in major surgery for burns.42,43

GPP Strong
2.22

For burns procedures where significant fluid loss is anticipated, blood and blood products should be immediately available.4,20,23,24

B Strong
2.23

Advice from a haematologist should be available at all times.

C Strong

Services

2.24

Psychology and physiotherapy should be available to help in managing the consequences of complex repetitive anaesthesia and the sedation and analgesia requirements of burn injured patients.4,44

GPP Strong
2.25

There should be access to an acute pain service.4,29,45,46

C Strong
2.26

There should be adequate, age appropriate critical care facilities, including high dependency and critical care units fulfilling national standards, to allow the timely admission of patients who require these services following surgery, including those with resuscitation burns and those undergoing free-flap surgery.4,9,32,47,48

C Strong

Facilities

2.27

Burn care services should have access to an appropriately sized, temperature and humidity controlled theatre at all times, with a maximum temperature setting of at least 30 degrees Celsius.5,23

C Strong
2.28

A burns theatre should be located in reasonable proximity to any service providing critical care for burn patients.4

C Strong
2.29

A dedicated burns theatre should be adequately stocked and resourced. Theatre anaesthetic equipment and transport monitoring should be compatible with that used in the critical care rooms. Single use patient items are preferred, and protocol based cleaning is needed between cases.19

C Strong
2.30

Anaesthesia led sedation for dressing changes should take place in rooms equipped with monitoring, piped medical gases, scavenging (where needed), suction, means of ventilation and drug infusion pumps.48

C Strong
2.31

Access to a high dependency unit for patients undergoing reconstructive surgery should be available.49

C Strong

3. Areas of special requirement

Children

General recommendations for the provision of anaesthesia services for children are described in Chapter 10.3

3.1

Wherever children and young people undergo anaesthesia, their particular needs should be recognised. They should be managed in age appropriate facilities and should be looked after by staff with relevant experience and continuing training.5

C Strong
3.2

Children with burns should be cared for in burn services in accordance with the National Burns Care Referral Guidance and with staff and facilities according to the burn care standards.4

C Strong
3.3

Anaesthetists caring for paediatric burns patients should be trained in paediatric multimodal pain management.51

C Strong
3.4

Children requiring surgery for cleft lip and palate should be treated by a specialist specialist cleft service.

C Strong
3.5

Wherever sedation services for paediatric burn management exist, anaesthetists should be involved with setting up, monitoring and auditing the service.

GPP Strong
3.6

Anaesthetists who prescribe sedation for paediatric burn patients should have received appropriate training. 15,52

GPP Strong
3.7

Anaesthetists who prescribe oral sedation for paediatric burn patients do not need to be physically present for the procedure for which sedation is being prescribed but they, or other suitably trained and experienced staff, need to be available to return immediately if the need arises.53

C Strong
3.8

General anaesthesia may be more appropriate than sedation for an individual. If general anaesthesia is performed in non-theatre environments, the recommendations in Chapter 7 should be followed.5

C Strong
3.9

Children undergoing anaesthesia and their families should be offered input from play specialists to help prepare the child for anaesthesia.4

C Strong

Child protection

It is essential to exclude non-accidental injury in children with burn injuries.

3.10

Healthcare workers, including the anaesthetist, must be aware of the local policy for child protection. They have an obligation to document and report any concerns to a responsible individual.54

M Mandatory
3.11

Hospitals must have guidelines in place to ensure the safety of children admitted to hospital, monitor injured children known to be at risk and identify concerns arising from any injury or pattern of injuries.29,55They must provide the appropriate training related to these guidelines.

M Mandatory

Critical care

Major burn injuries and complex plastic surgery cases often require critical care services. Recommendations for the provision of such services are described in guidelines for the provision of intensive care services.9

3.12

Staffing models should promote shared care between burn and critical care teams, as this may improve safety.56

B Strong

Procedural sedation

Dressing changes, with or without showering or bathing, are a frequent accompaniment to the early phase of burn treatment. Where possible, these procedures are conducted without general anaesthesia.

3.13

Any sedation service should be age appropriate, with general anaesthesia an option available for some cases.29,49,53,57,58

B Strong

4. Training and education

Different levels of training and continuing education are required, depending on the level of service provision provided by hospitals.

4.1

Patients requiring burn or plastic surgery procedures should be managed by anaesthetists who have an appropriate level of training in this field. They should have a regular commitment to the burn and plastic surgery specialty and should have acquired the relevant knowledge and skills needed to care for these patients.

GPP Strong
4.2

To maintain the necessary repertoire of skills, anaesthetists providing a burn and plastic surgery anaesthesia service should have a regular commitment to the specialty, and adequate time must be made for them to participate in a range of relevant CPD activities.

M Mandatory
4.3

Because burn care is a small specialty with relatively few anaesthetists able to participate in burn care during training, each service should have plans in place to establish and maintain an appropriate anaesthesia workforce.59

B Strong
4.4

A small number of centres perform burn surgery. These centres should offer external training opportunities for anaesthetists, nursing staff, physiotherapists and other members of the multidisciplinary team.60

B Strong
4.5

Anaesthetists who provide emergency care outside burn services should be trained in the initial management of the patient with severe burns, including timely emergency assessment, resuscitation and transfer to a burns service.61

B Strong

5. Organisation and administration

Burns

Requirements for links to other departments

Teams rather than individuals deliver care of the burn injured patient. Effective teamwork can increase safety, while poor teamwork can have the opposite effect. It is therefore important that burn services anaesthetists develop good working relationships and lines of communication with other healthcare professionals involved in the care of patients with burns.62

5.1

The anaesthetist should be part of a burns multidisciplinary team.4

B Strong

Organisation of lists

5.2

Burn surgery operating lists should be scheduled in working hours.63

B Strong
5.3

Additional burn surgery operating lists may be planned at weekends and bank holidays to prevent unnecessary delays in treatment.63

C Strong
5.4

Any scheduled burn lists should be organised and staffed by appropriately trained anaesthetists and surgeons who work regularly in that area and who have no conflicting clinical commitments.63

C Strong
5.5

Patients requiring planned or emergency burn surgery should be cared for by theatre staff with current experience in burn care.4Anaesthetists who provide emergency care outside burn services should be trained to manage the initial treatment of the patient with severe burns, including timely emergency assessment, resuscitation and transfer to a burns service.

C Strong
5.6

Theatre and recovery staffing arrangements should be compliant with national guidelines.11,12,64,

C Strong
5.7

Safe sedation and analgesia for burn injured patients undergoing painful procedures outside of the operating theatre environment should be available, for example staple removal, wound dressing and showering.5,11,49,65

C Strong
5.8

A nurse-led sedation service should be supported by an appropriately trained and experienced anaesthetist at all times.53

C Strong

Contingency plans for urgent procedures

5.9

Timely access to theatre staff with experience in burn care should be available outside of normal working hours in burn centres and units.4

C Strong
5.10

Theatre teams should be informed whenever a major burn case is expected or has arrived. A member of the theatre team should be responsible for ensuring the availability of appropriately trained staff and facilities.4

C Strong
5.11

All specialist burn services should participate in major incident planning with national and regional networks.4

C Strong
5.12

Providers of emergency care outside burn services should have the knowledge and equipment needed to treat burn-injured patients should there be an extended delay in transporting the patients to a burn centre, as might be the case in a mass casualty incident.66

C Strong
5.13

Transfer of the critically ill burn-injured patient between services should follow national guidelines.67,68,69

C Strong
5.14

Burn service leaders should actively engage in local and regional surge in demand planning.

C Strong
5.15

Each burn service should prepare to provide mutual aid to other burn services who may be overwhelmed.

C Strong
5.16

Early communication between service leads is vital.70

C Strong

Policies

5.17

Agreed local clinical guidelines should be in use that have been produced by an appropriately constituted multiprofessional team, comprising anaesthetists, specialist nurses, surgeons, critical care clinicians, pharmacists, specialty consultants or autonomously practising anaesthetist and managers. These guidelines should cover at least the following:

  • assessment and management of pain and pruritus, including the recording of pain and itch scores13,71
  • sedation for painful procedures4
  • initial assessment and management of burn-injured patients4
  • recognition and management of the acutely unwell and deteriorating patient, including the need to escalate care and transfer to a higher level of care4
  • assessment and management of burns to the face and airway4
  • local clinical guidelines on the analgesia and sedation for the use of enzymatic debridement of burn injuries
  • transfer policy, including the resources required4
  • all trusts with an emergency department should have a plan for the management of major incidents involving burn-injured patients72,72 that makes reference to the national burn major incident plan4
  • management of multi-drug resistant infections
  • perioperative temperature control20,74
  • thromboprophylaxis
  • major haemorrhage and transfusion policy42
  • provision of sedation and anaesthesia outside the operating theatre environment65
  • a lipid rescue protocol should be in place where local anaesthetic infiltration is used.75
C Strong

Plastic surgery

Organisation of lists

5.18

Elective plastic surgery operating lists should be separated from those for plastic surgery trauma to allow efficient planning in advance for elective cases, to prevent cancellation of elective cases and to allow a flexible response to emergencies.63

C Strong
5.19

Hospitals should provide scheduled local anaesthesia lists, using a dedicated area for initiating and assessing local nerve blocks. Organising cases in this way fosters the development and maintenance of expertise in the anaesthetists and support staff and minimises delay between cases.

GPP Strong
5.20

For planned burn and plastic surgery, there should be a preoperative assessment clinic organised as described in GPAS Chapter 2: Guidelines for the Provision of Anaesthesia Services for the Perioperative Care of Elective and Urgent Care Patients.2

GPP Strong
5.21

There should be specific guidelines for assessing a suspected difficult airway, for example in patients with head and neck malignancy and in reconstructive burn surgery.76

B Strong
5.22

Where major elective reconstructive surgery requiring postoperative critical care provision is undertaken, the funding for and provision of these beds should be planned to meet the demands of the service so that cancellations can be minimised.

GPP Strong
5.23

All major head and neck surgery should be overseen by a named consultant or autonomously practising anaesthetist with a subspecialty interest in this area.77

C Strong
5.24

There should be funding for and provision of staff trained in postoperative monitoring of free tissue transfers and replanted tissues to reduce the incidence of flap failure.47,78

C Strong
5.25

When very long surgical procedures are scheduled on a regular basis, appropriate funding and resources should be in place to support lists of long duration.

GPP Strong

Contingency plans for urgent procedures

5.26

Planned acute plastic surgery trauma lists should take place daily in working hours to prevent unnecessary overnight operating.63

C Strong
5.27

Patients should not unnecessarily undergo surgery at night. To prevent this, planned operating lists may be necessary in the evening and weekend, in addition to scheduled weekday trauma sessions.63,79

C Strong
5.28

Any scheduled plastic surgery trauma lists should be organised and staffed by senior anaesthetists and surgeons, working regularly in that area and without conflicting clinical commitments.63

C Strong
5.29

Departments should develop and regularly review burn and plastic surgery referral guidelines and major incident plans.66

C Strong

Policies

5.30

Agreed local clinical guidelines should be in use, produced by an appropriately constituted multiprofessional team comprising anaesthetists, specialist nurses, surgeons, critical care clinicians, pharmacists, specialty consultants or autonomously practising anaesthetists and managers. These guidelines should cover at least the following:

  • airway management, including follow-up for difficult situations (both plastic surgery and burn reconstructive surgery)76
  • monitoring of free flaps47
  • monitoring of local anaesthetic blocks
  • thromboprophylaxis41
  • perioperative warming.41
C Strong

6. Financial considerations

The costs of burn care are high, owing to the combination of specialised treatment and the often long lengths of stay.80Part of the methodology used in this chapter is a consideration of the financial impact for each of the recommendations made. Very few of the literature sources referenced have included financial analysis.

The majority of the recommendations are not new but are a synthesis of pre-existing work. Current compliance rates with the recommendations are unknown, so it is not possible to calculate the financial impact of their implementation in future practice. It is impossible to make an overall assessment of the financial impact of these recommendations with the currently available information.

7. Research, audit and quality improvement

7.1

Anaesthesia for burn and plastic surgery should be included in regular anaesthesia department mortality and morbidity meetings, audit meetings and quality improvement programmes. Burns services should actively participate in the network and in national mortality meetings.

GPP Strong
7.2

Multidisciplinary audit meetings involving surgical teams should be encouraged where mortality and morbidity should be discussed alongside all serious untoward incidents related to the service.

GPP Strong
7.3

Anaesthesia departments should be integrated into the overall clinical audit and governance structure of the hospital. Each anaesthesia department undertaking anaesthesia for burn and plastic surgery should have a system in place for the routine audit of important areas such as:

  • perioperative temperature
  • optimisation of perioperative blood transfusions42
  • management of perioperative pain and quality of analgesia81
  • management of perioperative blood pressure control in plastic surgery82
  • management of post-burn pruritus.83
B Strong
7.4

Burn services should undergo regular peer reviews within the national burn care network.4

C Strong
7.5

Departments of anaesthesia should be encouraged to develop local key quality indicators relevant to their activity, which will assist in the process of supporting quality improvement.4

C Strong
7.6

Research in anaesthesia for burn and plastic surgery should be encouraged. Staff members undertaking research should have received appropriate training.84

C Strong

8. Implementation support

The ACSA scheme run by the RCoA aims to provide support for departments of anaesthesia to implement the recommendations contained in the GPAS chapters. The scheme provides a set of standards and asks departments of anaesthesia to benchmark themselves against them using a self-assessment form available on the RCoA website. Every standard in ACSA is based on recommendation(s) contained in GPAS. The ACSA standards are reviewed annually and republished approximately four months after GPAS review and republication to ensure that they reflect current GPAS recommendations. ACSA standards include links to the relevant GPAS recommendations so that departments can refer to them while working through their gap analyses.

Departments of anaesthesia can subscribe to the ACSA process on payment of an appropriate fee. Once subscribed, they are provided with a ‘College guide’ (a member of the RCoA working group that oversees the process) or an experienced reviewer to assist them with identifying actions required to meet the standards. Departments must demonstrate adherence to all ‘priority one’ standards listed in the standards document to receive accreditation from the RCoA. This is confirmed during a visit to the department by a group of four ACSA reviewers (two clinical reviewers, a PatientsVoices@RCoA reviewer and an administrator), who submit a report back to the ACSA committee.

The ACSA committee has committed to building a ‘good practice library’, which will be used to collect and share documentation such as policies and checklists, as well as case studies of how departments have overcome barriers to implementation of the standards or have implemented the standards in innovative ways.

One of the outcomes of the ACSA process is to test the standards (and by doing so to test the GPAS recommendations) to ensure that they can be implemented by departments of anaesthesia and to consider any difficulties that may result from implementation. The ACSA committee has committed to measuring and reporting feedback of this type from departments engaging in the scheme back to the CDGs updating the guidance via the GPAS technical team.

9. Patient information

The RCoA has developed a range of Trusted Information Creator Kitemark accredited patient information resources that can be accessed from our website. Our main leaflets are now translated into more than 20 languages, including Welsh.

Patients with difficult airways

9.1

When an awake fibreoptic intubation is required, patients should be informed. As part of a difficult airway follow-up, patients should be informed verbally and in writing about any airway problem the anaesthetist encountered, and should be advised to bring this issue to the attention of anaesthetists during any future preoperative assessment. The patient’s general practitioner should also be informed in writing.85

C Strong

Regional anaesthesia

9.2

Where alternative techniques are available, the patient’s preference must be fully taken into account.86

M Mandatory

Consent

9.3

Anaesthetic risks must be communicated appropriately to the patient as part of the consent process.86 The RCoA series of leaflets on the risks of anaesthesia could aid this discussion.87

M Mandatory
9.4

There is a high incidence of ‘awareness’ under sedation and subsequent post-traumatic stress. The anaesthetist should obtain informed consent from the patent before any sedation is administered. This includes using descriptions of levels of sedation from the patient’s perspective.88

B Strong

Areas for future development

Topics in anaesthesia for burn and plastic surgery in need of further research include:

  • adjuncts to pain control in burn-injured patients35
  • effective treatments for post-burn pruritus83,89
  • core burn outcomes for research
  • fluid management
  • use of technology, such as telemedicine, to help burns assessment
  • financial implications of anaesthesia for burn and plastic surgery.

Glossary

Clinical lead SAS doctors undertaking lead roles should be autonomously practising doctors who have competence, experience and communication skills in the specialist area equivalent to consultant or autonomously practising anaesthetist colleagues. They should usually have experience in teaching and education relevant to the role and they should participate in quality improvement and CPD activities. Individuals should be fully supported by their clinical director and be provided with adequate time and resources to allow them to effectively undertake the lead role.

References

6. Guidance on the provision of paediatric anaesthesia services. RCoA, 2019
7. Guidance on the provision of head and neck surgery. RCoA, London 2019
8. Guidance on the provision of anaesthesia services for trauma and orthopaedic surgery. RCoA, 2019
13. Squires, SJ. Organization of burns services. Curr Anaesth & Criti Care 2002; 13: 83-6
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17. O'Connor D, Radcliffe J. Patient positioning in anaesthesia. Anaesth & Inten Care. 2015; 16: 543-7
19. McCauley P, Moore M, Duggan E. Anaesthesia for reconstructive free flap surgery for head and neck cancer. British Journal of Hospital Medicine. 2022; 83 1-9
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21. Hilton P, Hepp M. The immediate care of the burned patient. BJA CEPD Reviews 2001; 1: 113-6
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27. Higgs A, McGrath BA, Goddard C, Rangasami J, Suntharalingam G, Gale R, Cook TM; Difficult Airway Society; Intensive Care Society; Faculty of Intensive Care Medicine; Royal College of Anaesthetists. Guidelines for the management of tracheal intubation in critically ill adults. Br J Anaesth. 2018; 120: 323-52
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29. Fenlon S, Nene S. Burns in Children. CEACCP 2007; 7: 76-80
31. Bishop S, Maguire S. Anaesthesia and intensive care for major burns. CEACCP 2012; 12: 118-22
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33. Adams J, Charlton P. Anaesthesia for microvascular free tissue transfer. BJA CEPD Reviews 2003; 2: 33-7
34. Melloni C. Anesthesia and sedation outside the operating room: how to prevent risk and maintain good quality. Curr Op Anaesthesiol 2007; 20: 513-9
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