Standardization of Neuroanesthesia Education: Need of the Hour and the Way Forward.

TitleStandardization of Neuroanesthesia Education: Need of the Hour and the Way Forward.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2021
AuthorsRajan S, Bustillo M, Lee C, W Kofke A
JournalCurr Anesthesiol Rep
Pagination1-10
Date Published2021 Oct 26
ISSN1523-3855
Abstract

Purpose of Review: This review illustrates the evolution and progress with standardization of fellowship education in neuroanesthesiology. It provides a structured discussion around the need for curricula and framework which individual training programs in neuroanesthesiology can use to meet defined educational standards thus meeting criteria for accreditation.

Recent Findings: Neuroanesthesiology training has traditionally been heterogenous around the world but international efforts from the community of neuroanesthesiology have culminated in the development of an international council for perioperative training in neuroscience in anesthesiology(ICPNT). This serves not only as an accrediting body but also creates a platform through their neuroanesthesia program relations committee for collaboration and engagement between various training programs internationally, increasing the educational standards of the individual programs and collectively increasing the overall level of standards for neuroanesthesia training. Standardized curriculum and competency-based assessments and milestones would help with narrowing the focus to quality education in neuroanesthesiology.

Summary: Structured training around the three pillars of neuroanesthesiology with concomitant accreditation is expected to lead to higher education standards with better patient care. The SNACC created milestones for neuroanesthesiology training during residency and the ICPNT can now use this as a foundation for fellowship training. Having a council to accredit and standardize will likely become indispensable in creating a set path for training in neuroanesthesiology. Additionally, the flexibility built in due to the international nature would allow modified and variable pathways depending upon individual capabilities and interests. The path forward will include widespread adoption of standardization supporting the overarching goal of excellent patient outcomes around the world.

DOI10.1007/s40140-021-00477-y
Alternate JournalCurr Anesthesiol Rep
PubMed ID34720755
PubMed Central IDPMC8546382