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Anesthesia‐related and perioperative mortality: An audit of 8493 cases at a tertiary pediatric teaching hospital in South Africa
Author(s) -
Meyer Heidi M.,
Thomas Jenny,
Wilson Graeme S.,
de Kock Marianna
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
pediatric anesthesia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.704
H-Index - 82
eISSN - 1460-9592
pISSN - 1155-5645
DOI - 10.1111/pan.13214
Subject(s) - medicine , perioperative , tertiary care , audit , teaching hospital , anesthesia , emergency medicine , general surgery , management , economics
Summary Aim This study aimed to quantify the incidence of anesthesia‐related and perioperative mortality at a large tertiary pediatric hospital in South Africa. Methods This study included all children aged <18 years who died prior to discharge from hospital and within 30 days of their last anesthetic at the Red Cross War Memorial Children's Hospital between January 1, 2015 to December 31, 2015. A panel of three senior anesthetists reviewed each death to reach a consensus as to whether: (i) anesthesia caused the death; (ii) anesthesia may have contributed to or influenced the timing of death; or (iii) anesthesia was entirely unrelated to the death. Results There were 47 deaths within 30 days of anesthesia prior to discharge from hospital during this 12‐month period. The in‐hospital mortality within 24 h of administration of anesthesia was 16.5 per 10 000 cases (95% confidence intervals [CI]=7.8‐25.1) and within 30 days of administration of anesthesia was 55.3 per 10 000 cases (95% CI=39.5‐71.2). Age under 1 year (OR 4.5; 95% CI=2.5‐8.0, P =.012) and cardiac surgery and interventional cardiology procedures (OR 2.5; 95% CI=1.2‐5.2, P <.01) were both independent predictors of increased risk of perioperative mortality. Conclusion The overall 24‐h and 30‐day anesthesia‐related and in‐hospital perioperative mortality rates in our study are comparable with other similar studies from tertiary pediatric centers.

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