Abstract:
The risk is an undesirable or dreaded event. Its probability may be decreased by the prevention, its severity by the protection
and its perception reduced by the insurance acting on the acceptation and the transfer of the financial cost.
The security is a situation in which the activity process occurs without any damage for those who are undergoing or acting.
Nevertheless the absolute security, with a zero risk level, is a myth but security must be a target taking in account realistic technical
efforts and reasonable costs. The security in anaesthesia has considerably improved during these last two decades, by the fact of
pharmacological and technological advances, introduction of standards and guidelines, education, evolution of structures and
improvement of the anaesthetic team management. Anaesthesia linked mortality has been decreased by 20 in France between
1984 and 1999, evoluting from 1/13.000 to 1/200.000. The reduction is evident for each ASA grade but mainly for the ASA 4
patients. Similar between 0 to 40 years old patients, the mortality increases after 40 and mainly after 75 years. The mortality has
strongly decreased when in the same time the number of anaesthetics in France was twice the number, from 3.5 to 8.0 millions of
anaesthetics, concerning patient older and presenting several pathologies. Nevertheless, the risk has changed. Twenty years ago,
respiratory causes were the most frequent, but to–day the death by cardiac arrest, during and after anaesthesia, is mainly related
to heart and vascular failures.
Depression of respiratory centres previously frequently involved has been reduced when difficult intubation and inhalation
remain main causes. Among cardiac causes, the cardiogenic shock with or without myocardial infarction, due to anaemia and
hypoxia is the main cause of death. Similarly, absolute hypovolaemia by haemorrhage and relative hypovolaemia by sympathoplegia
are frequent mechanisms of acute cardiac failure.
The risk has diminished but mainly, the risk has changed. The analysis of accidents reveals active and latent risk factors. A
modern tendency is to emphasise latent risks, which are intricate to active factors to lead to the accident. Human factors are usually
involved in most of the anaesthetic accidents and near-miss incidents. Specific types of investigation are adapted to the various
levels of risks.
Recently, new dangerous behaviours have appeared, linked to the search of analgesia, novelty, originality, performance, and
paradoxically of security at any price. The anaesthesia risk is related to main risk factors involving anaesthesia team, techniques and
procedures, devices, surroundings, information, organisation and management. Specific measures are recommended to avoid these risks
but general arrangements must be focused on a selection of priorities, programmes of risk management based upon a better control of
the patient status, of the anaesthesia process, of the organisation and team management and of the analysis of accidents.
Many progresses have been made but remain also to perform, mainly by a better organisation and management and a prevention
of human errors. There is a need for a policy of risk management, a culture of security by the development of an evaluation of
professional practice (EPP), as a part of the Continuing Professional Development (CPD).