Originally Posted by shari_rn
CCRN,
Thank you for your response. I have no background in anesthesia,but I hope to apply to school next year. I have been working in my current SICU for 8 years.I do not really have knowledge of phases of anesthesia I hope to learn soon.
For my paper I am supposed to find support/discussion groups for my chosen condition which is patients that have experienced anesthesia awareness. I am supposed to go into these discussion groups and learn of the value of this type of cyber-support for patients without violating confidentiality. My big problem is that I have been unable to find any discussion groups. I have even joined post-traumatic stress sites and posted in them. The fact that I am unable to find these sites is a good thing for patients because it tells me it must be extremely rare. At the same time it is a bad thing for me because I have put so much time into looking for these discussion groups and I have come up with zero. I guess that is what I need to make the point of my paper. The companies that make the monitors want to scare the public into thinking that anesthesia awareness is common and their equiptment will prevent it.
Thank you for your help
It is rare. You might be better off researching the reliability of BIS monitors because you can use the background info. re: the issue of awareness. I think they're probably expensive crap that department are bullied into buying, but I do use occasionally for patients I believe to be at higher risk for recall. In crash C-sections, I tell patients that they might hear their baby cry after delivery but they won't feel pain so that they know this is not an unusual experience under the crash-section scenario.