Abstract
This article is a revised version of an analysis of reported incidents related to anaesthesia, originally published in the journal Anaesthesia (Catchpole et al 2008a) and undertaken on behalf of the National Patient Safety Agency. The purpose was to examine the range, types, frequencies and causes of reported patient safety incidents associated with anaesthesia. First we examined anaesthetic incidents as a sub-set of the total number of reported incidents; then we examined pre-surgery assessment, epidural anaesthesia, and anaesthetic awareness incidents, as they were identified as being frequent and of potential concern. To our knowledge it was the first paper to analyse and present results of the NPSA's database in a clinical academic journal. Here, we take the opportunity to re-present and review the findings in light of subsequent progress in understanding and improving patient safety and quality of care.
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