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What defines expertise in regional anaesthesia? An observational analysis of practice

What defines expertise in regional anaesthesia? An observational analysis of practice
What defines expertise in regional anaesthesia? An observational analysis of practice
Background. Published work on knowledge in regional anaesthesia has focused on competence, for instance by identifying numbers of procedures required to achieve competence, or by defining criteria for successful performance of blocks. We aimed to define expertise in regional anaesthesia and examine how it is acquired. Methods. We observed anaesthetists performing 15 regional anaesthetic blocks and analysed the resulting transcripts qualitatively and in detail. Results. Expertise in regional anaesthesia encompasses technical fluency but also includes non-cognitive skills such as handling of the patient (communicating, anticipating and minimizing discomfort) and recognizing the limits of safe practice (particularly deciding when to stop trying to insert a block). Such elements may be underplayed by the experts who possess them. Focusing on a small number of regional anaesthetic procedures in detail (as is standard with such qualitative analytical approaches) has also allowed us to develop a model for the acquisition of expertise. In this model, trainees learn how to balance theoretical and practical knowledge by reflection on their clinical experiences, an iterative process which leads to the embedding of knowledge in the expert’s personal repertoire of individual techniques. Conclusions. Expertise in regional anaesthesia extends beyond competence at technical performance; non-cognitive elements are also vital. Further work is needed to test our learning model, and the hypothesis that learning can be enhanced by deliberate promotion of the tacit elements of ‘expertise’ we have described.
anaesthesia, evaluation, anaesthetic techniques, regional, anaesthetists, competence, education
0007-0912
401-407
Smith, A.F.
628d52dc-ef76-40b6-9b86-7c809392878d
Pope, C.
21ae1290-0838-4245-adcf-6f901a0d4607
Goodwin, D.
44ea5b5f-3933-4171-83b6-8d48928e27ca
Mort, M.
0c5eea61-4f65-4520-92bd-7b4ead7e1247
Smith, A.F.
628d52dc-ef76-40b6-9b86-7c809392878d
Pope, C.
21ae1290-0838-4245-adcf-6f901a0d4607
Goodwin, D.
44ea5b5f-3933-4171-83b6-8d48928e27ca
Mort, M.
0c5eea61-4f65-4520-92bd-7b4ead7e1247

Smith, A.F., Pope, C., Goodwin, D. and Mort, M. (2006) What defines expertise in regional anaesthesia? An observational analysis of practice. British Journal of Anaesthesia, 97 (3), 401-407. (doi:10.1093/bja/ael175).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background. Published work on knowledge in regional anaesthesia has focused on competence, for instance by identifying numbers of procedures required to achieve competence, or by defining criteria for successful performance of blocks. We aimed to define expertise in regional anaesthesia and examine how it is acquired. Methods. We observed anaesthetists performing 15 regional anaesthetic blocks and analysed the resulting transcripts qualitatively and in detail. Results. Expertise in regional anaesthesia encompasses technical fluency but also includes non-cognitive skills such as handling of the patient (communicating, anticipating and minimizing discomfort) and recognizing the limits of safe practice (particularly deciding when to stop trying to insert a block). Such elements may be underplayed by the experts who possess them. Focusing on a small number of regional anaesthetic procedures in detail (as is standard with such qualitative analytical approaches) has also allowed us to develop a model for the acquisition of expertise. In this model, trainees learn how to balance theoretical and practical knowledge by reflection on their clinical experiences, an iterative process which leads to the embedding of knowledge in the expert’s personal repertoire of individual techniques. Conclusions. Expertise in regional anaesthesia extends beyond competence at technical performance; non-cognitive elements are also vital. Further work is needed to test our learning model, and the hypothesis that learning can be enhanced by deliberate promotion of the tacit elements of ‘expertise’ we have described.

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More information

Submitted date: July 2006
Published date: September 2006
Keywords: anaesthesia, evaluation, anaesthetic techniques, regional, anaesthetists, competence, education

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 42995
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/42995
ISSN: 0007-0912
PURE UUID: 839f78f7-7627-46c9-80b3-951352122058
ORCID for C. Pope: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8935-6702

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 05 Jan 2007
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 08:52

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Contributors

Author: A.F. Smith
Author: C. Pope ORCID iD
Author: D. Goodwin
Author: M. Mort

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