AI Article Synopsis

  • Procedural sedation lacks standardized competencies and training programs across various practitioners and settings, leading to inconsistency in practices.
  • The International Committee for the Advancement of Procedural Sedation aimed to establish a consensus on the essential competencies required for practitioners, utilizing a framework focused on Competency-Based Medical Education.
  • Through literature review and iterative consensus-building, the committee identified core competencies related to knowledge, skills, and attitudes, and proposed a structured framework for training and credentialing in procedural sedation.

Article Abstract

Procedural sedation is practised by a heterogeneous group of practitioners working in a wide array of settings. However, there are currently no accepted standards for the competencies a sedation practitioner should have, the content of sedation training programmes, and guidelines for credentialing. The multidisciplinary International Committee for the Advancement of Procedural Sedation sought to develop a consensus statement on the following: which competencies should medical or dental practitioners have for procedural sedation and how are they obtained, assessed, maintained, and privileged. Using the framework of Competency-Based Medical Education, the practice of procedural sedation was defined as a complex professional task requiring demonstrable integration of different competencies. For each question, the results of a literature review were synthetised into preliminary statements. Following an iterative Delphi review method, final consensus was reached. Using multispeciality consensus, we defined procedural sedation competence by identifying a set of core competencies in the domains of knowledge, skills, and attitudes across physical safety, effectiveness, psychological safety, and deliberate practice. In addition, we present a standardised framework for competency-based training and credentialing of procedural sedation practitioners.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bja.2024.07.036DOI Listing

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