The 31st Rovenstine lecture: The changing horizons in anesthesiology

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Abstract

Modern anesthesiology differs widely from what it was 40-50 years ago, not only because of what anesthesiology now involves in the operating room, but also because anesthesiology has expanded its horizons and activities above and beyond the provision of surgical anesthesia. These changes and the identity of modern anesthesiology are, however, but poorly understood, if understood at all, by the majority of laity and physicians alike. Such lack of identity, especially in the minds of those at the policy- and decision- making level, can only endanger the vitality and future of anesthesiology in an era of sweeping changes in health care-delivery systems. The problem of public identity of our specialty includes the historically correct, but, contemporaneously, all too often misleading name of our specialty. It is suggested that it is appropriate, at this time, to at least consider the potential advantages of changing the name of our specialty to, say, metesthesiology and metesthesiologist, to indicate that while, today, our specialty continues to involve operative anesthesia, it extends above and beyond to include a wide variety of professional activities outside the operating room richly rewarding to patient and practitioner alike.

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APA

Greene, N. M. (1993). The 31st Rovenstine lecture: The changing horizons in anesthesiology. In Anesthesiology (Vol. 79, pp. 164–170). https://doi.org/10.1097/00000542-199307000-00022

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