Anaesthesia praCtice for Caesarean dElivery Snapshot Study (ACCESS): Protocol and baseline characteristics of registered centres

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Anaesthesia praCtice for Caesarean dElivery Snapshot Study (ACCESS) : Protocol and baseline characteristics of registered centres. / Weiniger, C. F.; Brogly, N.; Lustig, A.; Van Den Bosch, O. F. C.; Kranke, P.; Lucas, N.; Morau, E.; Eklund, K.; Gunaydin, B.; Romero, C. Soledad; Afshari, A.

In: Acta Anaesthesiologica Scandinavica, 2024.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Weiniger, CF, Brogly, N, Lustig, A, Van Den Bosch, OFC, Kranke, P, Lucas, N, Morau, E, Eklund, K, Gunaydin, B, Romero, CS & Afshari, A 2024, 'Anaesthesia praCtice for Caesarean dElivery Snapshot Study (ACCESS): Protocol and baseline characteristics of registered centres', Acta Anaesthesiologica Scandinavica. https://doi.org/10.1111/aas.14427

APA

Weiniger, C. F., Brogly, N., Lustig, A., Van Den Bosch, O. F. C., Kranke, P., Lucas, N., Morau, E., Eklund, K., Gunaydin, B., Romero, C. S., & Afshari, A. (2024). Anaesthesia praCtice for Caesarean dElivery Snapshot Study (ACCESS): Protocol and baseline characteristics of registered centres. Acta Anaesthesiologica Scandinavica. https://doi.org/10.1111/aas.14427

Vancouver

Weiniger CF, Brogly N, Lustig A, Van Den Bosch OFC, Kranke P, Lucas N et al. Anaesthesia praCtice for Caesarean dElivery Snapshot Study (ACCESS): Protocol and baseline characteristics of registered centres. Acta Anaesthesiologica Scandinavica. 2024. https://doi.org/10.1111/aas.14427

Author

Weiniger, C. F. ; Brogly, N. ; Lustig, A. ; Van Den Bosch, O. F. C. ; Kranke, P. ; Lucas, N. ; Morau, E. ; Eklund, K. ; Gunaydin, B. ; Romero, C. Soledad ; Afshari, A. / Anaesthesia praCtice for Caesarean dElivery Snapshot Study (ACCESS) : Protocol and baseline characteristics of registered centres. In: Acta Anaesthesiologica Scandinavica. 2024.

Bibtex

@article{003af345426c4ae9a7039c05990d8b7b,
title = "Anaesthesia praCtice for Caesarean dElivery Snapshot Study (ACCESS): Protocol and baseline characteristics of registered centres",
abstract = "Background: Specific guidelines to manage caesarean delivery anaesthesia are lacking. A European multicentre study, ACCESS investigates caesarean delivery anaesthesia management in European centres. In order to identify ACCESS participating centres, a registration survey was created. Objective: The aim of the current report is to describe the characteristics of ACCESS study participating centres, the rationale for the ACCESS study and the study methodology. Design and Setting: The ACCESS study is a European multicentre cross-sectional study to describe anaesthesia management for caesarean delivery (CD) using a snapshot (2-week) design. The ACCESS registration survey gathered: contact details for National Coordinators (NC); Lead Investigators (LI) per centre; centre annual CD volume; expected no. of CD during 2-week snapshot window; centre practice information; data collection language. The ACCESS registration survey was launched July 2022 (Google Forms, Google Inc., Mountain View, CA, USA) and distributed through personal connections, national and international societies, social media networks, during Euroanaesthesia 2023, through the European Society of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care newsletter. Results: The ACCESS registration survey identified Lead Investigators for 418 centres, in 32 countries, representing an anticipated number of 15,073 CD cases over the planned 12-month study period. A median (range) of 20 (2 to 400) CD cases are anticipated per centre during the 2-week snapshot window. Most 366/418 (87.6%) centres are small, ≤2000 annual CD cases, 42 are medium 2000–5000 cases and 10 are large, ≥5000 annual CD cases. Registered centres reported in 134 (32.0%) centres that anaesthesia for caesarean delivery is performed mostly by a specialist obstetric anaesthesiologist. Conclusion: The ACCESS registration survey revealed variability in volume and CD practice as well as training-levels and staffing among European countries. The ACCESS study (https://www.access-study.org/) aims to generate practice data to guide CD anaesthetic management strategies.",
keywords = "anaesthesia, caesarean, general, neuraxial, practice",
author = "Weiniger, {C. F.} and N. Brogly and A. Lustig and {Van Den Bosch}, {O. F. C.} and P. Kranke and N. Lucas and E. Morau and K. Eklund and B. Gunaydin and Romero, {C. Soledad} and A. Afshari",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2024 The Authors. Acta Anaesthesiologica Scandinavica published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Acta Anaesthesiologica Scandinavica Foundation.",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.1111/aas.14427",
language = "English",
journal = "Acta Anaesthesiologica Scandinavica",
issn = "0001-5172",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Anaesthesia praCtice for Caesarean dElivery Snapshot Study (ACCESS)

T2 - Protocol and baseline characteristics of registered centres

AU - Weiniger, C. F.

AU - Brogly, N.

AU - Lustig, A.

AU - Van Den Bosch, O. F. C.

AU - Kranke, P.

AU - Lucas, N.

AU - Morau, E.

AU - Eklund, K.

AU - Gunaydin, B.

AU - Romero, C. Soledad

AU - Afshari, A.

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2024 The Authors. Acta Anaesthesiologica Scandinavica published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Acta Anaesthesiologica Scandinavica Foundation.

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - Background: Specific guidelines to manage caesarean delivery anaesthesia are lacking. A European multicentre study, ACCESS investigates caesarean delivery anaesthesia management in European centres. In order to identify ACCESS participating centres, a registration survey was created. Objective: The aim of the current report is to describe the characteristics of ACCESS study participating centres, the rationale for the ACCESS study and the study methodology. Design and Setting: The ACCESS study is a European multicentre cross-sectional study to describe anaesthesia management for caesarean delivery (CD) using a snapshot (2-week) design. The ACCESS registration survey gathered: contact details for National Coordinators (NC); Lead Investigators (LI) per centre; centre annual CD volume; expected no. of CD during 2-week snapshot window; centre practice information; data collection language. The ACCESS registration survey was launched July 2022 (Google Forms, Google Inc., Mountain View, CA, USA) and distributed through personal connections, national and international societies, social media networks, during Euroanaesthesia 2023, through the European Society of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care newsletter. Results: The ACCESS registration survey identified Lead Investigators for 418 centres, in 32 countries, representing an anticipated number of 15,073 CD cases over the planned 12-month study period. A median (range) of 20 (2 to 400) CD cases are anticipated per centre during the 2-week snapshot window. Most 366/418 (87.6%) centres are small, ≤2000 annual CD cases, 42 are medium 2000–5000 cases and 10 are large, ≥5000 annual CD cases. Registered centres reported in 134 (32.0%) centres that anaesthesia for caesarean delivery is performed mostly by a specialist obstetric anaesthesiologist. Conclusion: The ACCESS registration survey revealed variability in volume and CD practice as well as training-levels and staffing among European countries. The ACCESS study (https://www.access-study.org/) aims to generate practice data to guide CD anaesthetic management strategies.

AB - Background: Specific guidelines to manage caesarean delivery anaesthesia are lacking. A European multicentre study, ACCESS investigates caesarean delivery anaesthesia management in European centres. In order to identify ACCESS participating centres, a registration survey was created. Objective: The aim of the current report is to describe the characteristics of ACCESS study participating centres, the rationale for the ACCESS study and the study methodology. Design and Setting: The ACCESS study is a European multicentre cross-sectional study to describe anaesthesia management for caesarean delivery (CD) using a snapshot (2-week) design. The ACCESS registration survey gathered: contact details for National Coordinators (NC); Lead Investigators (LI) per centre; centre annual CD volume; expected no. of CD during 2-week snapshot window; centre practice information; data collection language. The ACCESS registration survey was launched July 2022 (Google Forms, Google Inc., Mountain View, CA, USA) and distributed through personal connections, national and international societies, social media networks, during Euroanaesthesia 2023, through the European Society of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care newsletter. Results: The ACCESS registration survey identified Lead Investigators for 418 centres, in 32 countries, representing an anticipated number of 15,073 CD cases over the planned 12-month study period. A median (range) of 20 (2 to 400) CD cases are anticipated per centre during the 2-week snapshot window. Most 366/418 (87.6%) centres are small, ≤2000 annual CD cases, 42 are medium 2000–5000 cases and 10 are large, ≥5000 annual CD cases. Registered centres reported in 134 (32.0%) centres that anaesthesia for caesarean delivery is performed mostly by a specialist obstetric anaesthesiologist. Conclusion: The ACCESS registration survey revealed variability in volume and CD practice as well as training-levels and staffing among European countries. The ACCESS study (https://www.access-study.org/) aims to generate practice data to guide CD anaesthetic management strategies.

KW - anaesthesia

KW - caesarean

KW - general

KW - neuraxial

KW - practice

U2 - 10.1111/aas.14427

DO - 10.1111/aas.14427

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 38669012

AN - SCOPUS:85191317105

JO - Acta Anaesthesiologica Scandinavica

JF - Acta Anaesthesiologica Scandinavica

SN - 0001-5172

ER -

ID: 393269944