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. 2009 Nov;21(7):508-13.
doi: 10.1016/j.jclinane.2008.12.026.

Should anesthesia residents with a history of substance abuse be allowed to continue training in clinical anesthesia? The results of a survey of anesthesia residency program directors

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Should anesthesia residents with a history of substance abuse be allowed to continue training in clinical anesthesia? The results of a survey of anesthesia residency program directors

Ethan O Bryson. J Clin Anesth. 2009 Nov.

Abstract

Study objective: To determine the experience, attitudes, and opinions of program directors regarding the reintroduction of residents in recovery from substance abuse into the clinical practice of anesthesiology.

Design: Survey instrument.

Setting: Anesthesia residency training programs in the United States.

Measurements: After obtaining institutional review board approval, a list of current academic anesthesia residency programs in the United States was compiled. A survey was mailed to 131 program directors along with a self-addressed stamped return envelope to ensure anonymity. Returned surveys were reviewed and data compiled by hand, with categorical variables described as frequency and percentages.

Main results: A total of 91 (69%) surveys were returned, representing experience with 11,293 residents over the ten-year period from July of 1997 through June of 2007. Fifty-six (62%) program directors reported experience with at least one resident requiring treatment for substance abuse. For residents allowed to continue with anesthesia residency training after treatment, the relapse rate was 29%. For those residents, death was the initial presentation of relapse in 10% of the reported cases. 43% of the program directors surveyed believe residents in recovery from addiction should be allowed to attempt re-entry while 30% believe that residents in recovery from addiction should not.

Conclusions: The practice of allowing residents who have undergone treatment for substance abuse to return to their training program in clinical anesthesia remains highly controversial. They are often lost to follow-up, making it difficult, if not impossible to determine if re-training in a different medical specialty decreases their risk for relapse. A comprehensive assessment of the outcomes associated with alternatives to re-entry into clinical anesthesia training programs is needed.

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