Perspectives on Anesthesia and Perioperative Patient Safety: Past, Present, and Future

Anesthesiology. 2024 Nov 1;141(5):835-848. doi: 10.1097/ALN.0000000000005164.

Abstract

During the past 70 years, patient safety science has evolved through four organizational frameworks known as Safety-0, Safety -1, Safety-2, and Safety-3. Their evolution reflects the realization over time that blaming people, chasing errors, fixing one-offs, and regulation would not create the desired patient safety. In Safety-0, the oldest framework, harm events arise from clinician failure; event prevention relies on better staffing, education, and basic standards. In Safety-1, used by hospitals, harm events arise from individual and/or system failures. Safety is improved through analytics, workplace culture, high reliability principles, technology, and quality improvement. Safety-2 emphasizes clinicians' adaptability to prevent harm events in an everchanging environment, using resilience engineering principles. Safety-3, used by aviation, adds system design and control elements to Safety-1 and Safety-2, deploying human factors, design-thinking, and operational control or feedback to prevent and respond to harm events. Safety-3 represents a potential way for anesthesia and perioperative care to become safer.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Anesthesia* / adverse effects
  • Anesthesia* / methods
  • Anesthesia* / standards
  • Anesthesiology / methods
  • Anesthesiology / standards
  • Anesthesiology / trends
  • Humans
  • Patient Safety*
  • Perioperative Care* / methods
  • Perioperative Care* / standards
  • Perioperative Care* / trends
  • Quality Improvement
  • Safety Management / methods
  • Safety Management / trends