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Committee on Uniformed Services and Veterans Affairs
(USVA) is made up of ASA members with strong ties
to the Veterans Affairs (VA) committee and the Department
of Defense (DOD), which includes the Army, Navy
and Air Force. The main goal of the USVA committee
is to provide an avenue for communication for ASA
and the anesthesiologists who work in VA and DOD
facilities to enhance the practice of anesthesiology.
The two major issues that this committee has focused
on in the past five years have been the controversy
of independent practice of nurse anesthetists and
creating a component society for active-duty military
anesthesiologists. Though these two issues may seem
unrelated, the first stressed the dire need for
the second.
The military has undergone dramatic changes in the
past decade. One of the major changes has been the
decrease in size of the active duty force, including
a dramatic reduction in active-duty anesthesiologists.
Since 1990, active-duty anesthesiologists have decreased
from just over 600 to roughly 225. In the late 1990s,
this reduction created a crisis as there were not
enough anesthesiologists to staff all the military
hospitals and support the care team model in every
military hospital. In response the Navy implemented
a universal policy of independent practice for nurse
anesthetists for ASA Physical Status 1 and 2 patients,
and the Army quickly followed. The response from
individual anesthesiologists was exceptional, but
it was uncoordinated and ineffective, and the nurse
anesthetist policies were implemented. The lack
of a coordinated response was reinforced when follow-up
from anesthesiology specialty leaders in the Army
and Navy at USVA meetings was instrumental in the
Air Force not adopting a policy of independent practice.
To capitalize on this opportunity for coordinated
effort, from 2001 until 2003, Thomas H. Cromwell,
M.D. (former ASA Secretary), Alvin R. Manalaysay,
M.D., Ph.D., (former USVA committee chair), Lynn
M. Broadman, M.D., (USVA committee member), Peter
L. Hendricks, M.D., (ASA Secretary) and others paved
the way for forming a component society for military
anesthesiologists.
Military anesthesiologists have always been a geographically
diverse group with few ties to the state component
societies. Subsequently, few joined state societies,
and less than 10 were active members of ASA in the
past 20 years. In addition the military anesthesiology
community is young with 80 percent less than five
years out of residency and 95 percent less than
10 years out of residency. These factors, coupled
with the increased practice of isolation, showed
that the number who joined ASA as affiliate members
had dwindled to less than 50 percent (2002 USVA
committee survey). Members of the USVA committee
and the military community worked diligently, and
by early 2003, bylaws were drafted that were approved
by ASA.
The Uniformed Services Society of Anesthesiologists
(USSA) was officially chartered as a component society
in October 2003. In anticipation of this event,
members of the armed forces planned an inaugural
meeting for USSA on October 10, 2003, at the San
Francisco Hilton before the start of the 2003 ASA
Annual Meeting. Despite deployments secondary to
Afghanistan and Iraq and the need to provide clinical
care at respective hospitals, the inaugural meeting
was a huge success with 44 active-duty anesthesiologists
attending. The professional interaction of that
one event reinforced the need to work collaboratively
and has helped to add 54 new active USSA/ASA members
in only six months. In that time, USSA members have
worked collaboratively on issues ranging from deployment
concerns for recent graduates in the board-certification
process to common equipment development issues and
improving business practices to maintaining effective
oversight of the medical practice of anesthesiology
in all military hospitals.
Although reversing independent practice policies
in the Army and Navy is not likely, through increased
interaction and opening of communications, this
extended professional network is working to ensure
that patient safety is protected through a unified
voice for policy development. Recent success has
been achieved for oversight of clinical practice
to reduce practice variability between military
hospitals by pursuing consistency in core credentialing
parameters. The pursuit of these policies helps
to ensure that the credentialing procedures of anesthesiologists
and nurse anesthetists are based on training and
demonstrated competency. These issues have become
increasingly important as nurse anesthetists in
the past year have sought to increase the scope
of their practice to include the delivery of care
in pain medicine clinics and the performance of
advanced regional anesthesia procedures. Another
positive action was effectively providing input
for the approval of the use for anesthesiologist
assistants for Tricare payment and for hiring at
military facilities.
While the achievements of USSA and closer cooperation
in the military is a step in the right direction,
its expansion to VA anesthesiologists and civilian
anesthesiologists working at military facilities
may be warranted. In the Army alone, there are more
than 50 civilian anesthesiologists who work full
time in military hospitals. Most do not belong to
state societies, and their concerns are similar
to the active-duty anesthesiologists with whom they
work. In addition there is increased congressional
pressure for collaboration between the VA committee
and DOD. Past VA-DOD collaboration has resulted
in positive benefits in the development of practice
guidelines for postoperative pain <www.oqp.med.va.gov/cpg/pain/pain_cpg/frameset.htm>
and opioid use for chronic pain <www.oqp.med.va.gov/cpg/cot/cot_cpg/frameset.htm>.
Other areas of common interest for the VA-DOD anesthesiology
community continue to be independent practice issues,
the integration of intraoperative record keepers
into enterprise-wide computerized patient records,
and joint residency and anesthetist training initiatives.
Some of the civilian anesthesiologists employed
by the military and VA have expressed interest in
expanding USSA membership criteria and joining USSA
since their major concerns are not addressed by
state societies.
Achieving a critical mass of interested and active
participants is necessary for any organization to
be fully successful. Perhaps the benefits of improved
professional collaboration and representation would
be best served by allowing free choice for civilian
DOD and veteran anesthesiologists in choosing a
component society when they feel disenfranchised
by their current options.
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Paul D. Mongan, M.D., is Associate Professor
and Chair, Department of Anesthesiology, The
Uniformed Services University, Bethesda, Maryland.
He is a Lieutenant Colonel in the U.S. Marine
Corps. |
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