Original Research

Death on the table: anaesthetic registrars’ experiences of perioperative death

Sandhya Jithoo, T.E. Sommerville
Southern African Journal of Anaesthesia and Analgesia | Vol 23, No 1 | a1012 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/22201181.2017.1286064 | © 2017 Sandhya Jithoo, T.E. Sommerville | This work is licensed under Other
Submitted: 14 November 2025 | Published: 27 February 2017

About the author(s)

Sandhya Jithoo, Department of Anaesthesiology and Critical Care, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, South Africa
T.E. Sommerville, Department of Anaesthesiology and Critical Care, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, South Africa

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Abstract

Background: A perioperative death can be a devastating event for which anaesthetists’ training does not necessarily prepare them. Previous authors have documented a range of reactions to this event. This study set out to explore individual personal and professional reactions amongst a group of senior anaesthetic trainees.
Methods: A qualitative methodology was employed and purposive sampling used to select participants. Ten registrars in their fourth year of specialist training in the University of KwaZulu-Natal Department of Anaesthesia were interviewed. Transcripts of the interviews were thematically analysed.
Results: Themes expressed by participants fell into three broad categories: professional role (responsibility, coping, functioning after a death), relationships with patients and families (nature of the case, emotional distress, bearing bad news), and personal impact (guilt, physical sequelae, support, desensitisation).
Conclusion: Participants’ perceptions supported the notion of potential second (anaesthetist) and third (subsequent patient) victims after a perioperative death. These underscore the importance of the expressed need for debriefing and an interval before resuming duty. The phenomenon of desensitisation was expressed as a spectrum between being dissociated from the event and disconnected from the people involved, raising the possibility of perioperative death as a contributing factor to burnout. This study hopes to improve awareness of the potential consequences of perioperative death and the need for these consequences to be addressed.

Keywords

anaesthesia training; debriefing; desensitisation; perioperative death

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