News

Patient-Controlled Epidural Anesthesia Cuts Anesthetic Use

View on the News

headline

Body text goes here

Doctor’s Bio


 

FROM THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE SOCIETY FOR MATERNAL-FETAL MEDICINE

However, overall maternal satisfaction with pain relief was similarly high in all three groups, and hourly pain scores did not differ.

An attendee noted that it is difficult to get anesthesiologists to change their practice and asked Dr. Haydon whether PCEA would be "a hard sell" given that the main benefit was simply reduced anesthetic use.

"The dollars aren’t going to be worth it in terms of the medication cost," he acknowledged, but if there were any reduction in cesarean section rate that would certainly be compelling.

Dr. Haydon did not report any relevant financial disclosures.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Single Embryo Transfers Increase in 2009
MDedge Family Medicine
Optimal Therapy Elusive for Many Ovarian Cancer Patients With Medicare
MDedge Family Medicine
Absolute Risk of Atypical Fractures is Low in Bisphosphonate Users
MDedge Family Medicine
Rand Review Links Less-Aggressive ALCL With Breast Implants
MDedge Family Medicine
Heavier Pregnant Women Found to Have Longer Labor
MDedge Family Medicine
Serum Aneuploidy Markers May Predict Stillbirth
MDedge Family Medicine
Elevation of Maternal Proinflammatory Cytokines Heralds Labor Onset
MDedge Family Medicine
Severe Preeclampsia Predicted by 2nd Trimester Serum Markers
MDedge Family Medicine
Shoulder Dystocia Protocol Reduces Brachial Plexus Injuries
MDedge Family Medicine
Techniques Compared for Breast Tumor Detection
MDedge Family Medicine