Cost drain of anesthesia emergency drugs in a quaternary care hospital

Background: Anesthesiologists draw up a selection of drugs for emergency use at the start of their list; unused drugs are discarded at the end of the list, to prevent contamination and spread of infections. We audited the practice in our department to evaluate the scale and cost impact of anesthesia...

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Main Authors: Amer Majeed, Attyia Firdous, Hesham AlBabtain, Tahir Iqbal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications 2019-01-01
Series:Saudi Journal of Anaesthesia
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.saudija.org/article.asp?issn=1658-354X;year=2019;volume=13;issue=3;spage=203;epage=207;aulast=Majeed
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spelling doaj-3be4d7a304a64ed2801b7410bfb12c2b2020-11-25T01:05:48ZengWolters Kluwer Medknow PublicationsSaudi Journal of Anaesthesia1658-354X2019-01-0113320320710.4103/sja.SJA_706_18Cost drain of anesthesia emergency drugs in a quaternary care hospitalAmer MajeedAttyia FirdousHesham AlBabtainTahir IqbalBackground: Anesthesiologists draw up a selection of drugs for emergency use at the start of their list; unused drugs are discarded at the end of the list, to prevent contamination and spread of infections. We audited the practice in our department to evaluate the scale and cost impact of anesthesia emergency drugs wastage. Subjects and Methods: A questionnaire was randomly given to anesthesiologists in our department, working in some of the operating rooms in our main floor, every morning over 7 working days. Completed forms were collected at the end of respective lists. Results: A total of 93 completed forms were returned. Ephedrine (96%) and phenyepherine (95%) were the most frequently drawn drugs; atropine (96%) and suxamthonium (92%) were the most frequently discarded drugs. Phenylepherine was the single most expensive item wasted, representing 160% of the cost of all other drugs wasted together, and the price of discarded ephedrine and phenylephrine together represented 3/4th of the total wastage. Some practices carried room for rationalization, such as drawing up of atropine and glycopyrolate simultaneously, of both the vasopressors in patients unsuspected for developing significant hypotension, or of suxamethonium in a patient planned to be intubated and postoperative ventilation. Conclusion: Significant savings may be realized through switching to prefilled syringes, making protocols available for rational use of emergency drugs, and safe pooling of expensive drugs between adjacent operating rooms, in an anesthesia department.http://www.saudija.org/article.asp?issn=1658-354X;year=2019;volume=13;issue=3;spage=203;epage=207;aulast=MajeedCost; emergency drugs; wastage
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Amer Majeed
Attyia Firdous
Hesham AlBabtain
Tahir Iqbal
spellingShingle Amer Majeed
Attyia Firdous
Hesham AlBabtain
Tahir Iqbal
Cost drain of anesthesia emergency drugs in a quaternary care hospital
Saudi Journal of Anaesthesia
Cost; emergency drugs; wastage
author_facet Amer Majeed
Attyia Firdous
Hesham AlBabtain
Tahir Iqbal
author_sort Amer Majeed
title Cost drain of anesthesia emergency drugs in a quaternary care hospital
title_short Cost drain of anesthesia emergency drugs in a quaternary care hospital
title_full Cost drain of anesthesia emergency drugs in a quaternary care hospital
title_fullStr Cost drain of anesthesia emergency drugs in a quaternary care hospital
title_full_unstemmed Cost drain of anesthesia emergency drugs in a quaternary care hospital
title_sort cost drain of anesthesia emergency drugs in a quaternary care hospital
publisher Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications
series Saudi Journal of Anaesthesia
issn 1658-354X
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Background: Anesthesiologists draw up a selection of drugs for emergency use at the start of their list; unused drugs are discarded at the end of the list, to prevent contamination and spread of infections. We audited the practice in our department to evaluate the scale and cost impact of anesthesia emergency drugs wastage. Subjects and Methods: A questionnaire was randomly given to anesthesiologists in our department, working in some of the operating rooms in our main floor, every morning over 7 working days. Completed forms were collected at the end of respective lists. Results: A total of 93 completed forms were returned. Ephedrine (96%) and phenyepherine (95%) were the most frequently drawn drugs; atropine (96%) and suxamthonium (92%) were the most frequently discarded drugs. Phenylepherine was the single most expensive item wasted, representing 160% of the cost of all other drugs wasted together, and the price of discarded ephedrine and phenylephrine together represented 3/4th of the total wastage. Some practices carried room for rationalization, such as drawing up of atropine and glycopyrolate simultaneously, of both the vasopressors in patients unsuspected for developing significant hypotension, or of suxamethonium in a patient planned to be intubated and postoperative ventilation. Conclusion: Significant savings may be realized through switching to prefilled syringes, making protocols available for rational use of emergency drugs, and safe pooling of expensive drugs between adjacent operating rooms, in an anesthesia department.
topic Cost; emergency drugs; wastage
url http://www.saudija.org/article.asp?issn=1658-354X;year=2019;volume=13;issue=3;spage=203;epage=207;aulast=Majeed
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