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Anesthesia‐related mortality and morbidity over a 5‐year period in 2,363,038 patients in Japan

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TLDR
The need to comprehensively examine the events of cardiac arrest as well as mortality prompted the first national study in Japan, which reported data of mortality and morbidity related to anesthesia since World War II.
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Survey of anesthesia-related mortality in France

TL;DR: The anesthesia-related mortality rate in France seems to be reduced 10-fold in 1999, and concerns regarding aspiration of gastric contents and anemia associated with postoperative ischemic complications were the associated factors most often encountered.
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Epidemiology of Anesthesia-related Mortality in the United States, 1999–2005

TL;DR: Each year in the United States, anesthesia/anesthetics are reported as the underlying cause in approximately 34 deaths and contributing factors in another 281 deaths, with excess mortality risk in the elderly and men.
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Trained registered nurses/endoscopy teams can administer propofol safely for endoscopy.

TL;DR: Trained nurses and endoscopists can administer propofol safely for endoscopic procedures and is one potential solution to the high cost associated with anesthetist-delivered sedation for endoscopy.
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Postoperative Mortality in Children After 101,885 Anesthetics at a Tertiary Pediatric Hospital

TL;DR: Anesthesia-related mortality is higher in children with heart disease and in particular those with pulmonary hypertension, and the lack of anesthetic-related deaths in children who did not have major comorbidities reinforces the safety of pediatric anesthesia in healthy children.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Complications associated with anaesthesia--a prospective survey in France.

TL;DR: Mortality was lower following complications during anaesthesia than for those during the recovery period, and the rate of complications appeared to be dependent upon several risk factors: the patient’s age, thenumber of associated diseases, the preoperative status, whether the operation was an emergency and the duration of procedure.
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Major Morbidity and Mortality Within 1 Month of Ambulatory Surgery and Anesthesia

TL;DR: In this ambulatory surgical population, more than one third of major morbidity occurred 48 hours or later after surgery, however, overall morbidity and mortality rates were very low.
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Prevention of Intraoperative Anesthesia Accidents and Related Severe Injury through Safety Monitoring

TL;DR: This and the case analyses support the contention that nearly all the inevitable mishaps that occur during anesthesia can be identified through safety monitoring early enough to prevent most major patient injuries and lessen the medical-legal and malpractice insurance burdens of anesthesiologists.
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Does Anesthesia Contribute to Operative Mortality

TL;DR: An anesthesia follow-up program and vital statistics data were used to assess the role of anesthesia in operative deaths and patient and surgical risk factors were much more important in predicting seven-day mortality than the anesthesia factors the authors studied.
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Cardiac arrest during anaesthesia. A computer-aided study in 250,543 anaesthetics.

TL;DR: The incidence of cardiac arrest has declined considerably during the period studied, and this coincides with an increasing number of qualified anaesthetists employed in the department during the same period.
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