Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

MPOG study overview Anesthesia mortality: –1/5,000 in 1950 –1/200,000 in 2008 Significant morbidity for RARE events –Renal Failure, Myocardial Infarction,

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "MPOG study overview Anesthesia mortality: –1/5,000 in 1950 –1/200,000 in 2008 Significant morbidity for RARE events –Renal Failure, Myocardial Infarction,"— Presentation transcript:

1 MPOG study overview Anesthesia mortality: –1/5,000 in 1950 –1/200,000 in 2008 Significant morbidity for RARE events –Renal Failure, Myocardial Infarction, Stroke, Loss of Airway, Blindness –Unknown incidence, impact, anesthetic relationship

2 Study overview Recent retrospective data Renal failure: 0.8% –Myocardial infarction: 1.0% –Stroke: 0.7 - 1% –Impossible airway: 0.16% –Blindness: 0.013% Collect completely limited data set (only date of service) AFTER clinical care

3 Benefits First data to enable –Patient consent –Prospective prevention trials (with separate IRB) Major morbidity, “common” if aggregated Alter anesthetic management fundamentally Complete absence of data currently

4 Patient Risk Clinical –Zero: no changes in care Privacy –Less than minimal –All identifiers removed, not available to PI, statisticians, authors –Only PHI: date of surgery –Behind UM firewall, MCIT computers –Informatics specialists ensuring security

5 Waiver of consent Selection bias reducing scientific validity –Even one or two patients can alter scientific validity: 37 events out of 22,600 for airway emergencies –Patients not consenting may be essential to population: chronic pain analysis

6 Waiver of consent Not practicable –Need to “enroll” hundreds of thousands of patients to detect sufficient events –Impossible to consent or inform this number of patients –“Opt-out” concept (ie, line on surgical consent) requires personnel infrastructure and process –Would INCREASE privacy risk to record MRN of these patients


Download ppt "MPOG study overview Anesthesia mortality: –1/5,000 in 1950 –1/200,000 in 2008 Significant morbidity for RARE events –Renal Failure, Myocardial Infarction,"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google