INTRODUCTION
Progress in surgery would not have been possible without the advances in anesthesia, which have actually contributed to the development of surgical subspecialties. However, the same has not been true in the field of anesthesiology itself, especially in pediatric anesthesia, which has been slow to evolve as compared to other areas. For this reason, it is considered a fledgeling subspecialty 1 in urgent need of becoming strong, given that, in the developing world, 40 to 50% population is under 18 years of age and 85% of this population will require a surgical intervention before 15 years of age 2.
As far as the development of anesthesia in pediatrics, when considering the significant size of this population and the clinical challenges it poses in terms of physiological and psychological differences 3 , it is clear that the number of trained and qualified specialists is quite limited, as is also the number of training opportunities 4 . In view of this situation, starting in the 1990s, pediatric anesthesia societies began to come to the forefront in the United States 5 and in Europe 6, calling for the need to promote quality in anesthesia, improve perioperative care and pain management in children through the development of clinical care models and promotion of training and formal education programs in this subspecialty. However, in Latin America, the possibilities of applying to a specialization in pediatric anesthesiology are still limited 7.
In Colombia, the creation of a pediatric anesthesia subspecialty program with university endorsement has not been possible so far, prompting the Colombian Society of Anesthesiology to foster continuing education as the strategy to maintain the anesthesia profession abreast.
The purpose of this article is to provide an account of how pediatric anesthesia training has developed in the world and locally, emphasizing the need for training programs in this discipline in Colombia, with a view at aligning professional practice with global policies and trends and seeking safe and quality care for the pediatric population.
Anesthetic complications and training in pediatric anesthesiology
As a subspecialty, pediatric anesthesia emerged from the realization that mortality is two to three times higher in children than in adults, particularly in low or medium income countries, and the recognition of anatomical, pharmacological, pathophysiological and procedural differences in the pediatric population 1. Added to this is the fact that training during the graduate anesthesia program is short, with local exposure to the pediatric population in mixed hospitals in which this population is not the sole focus of care accounting for only 12% of the total anesthesia workload, thus limiting the acquisition of the competencies and skills needed to provide safe care to this age group 1. Along the same lines, it is important to remember that a qualified pediatric anesthetist needs a minimum caseload 200 to 300 children up to 10 years of age, including one infant per month 8. One can conclude that financial pressures, the lack of logistic resources and of a well trained team, as well as the lack of training in pediatric anesthesia result in procedures with low anesthetic risk becoming high anesthetic risk scenarios as they are performed by people without experience or sufficient training 9.
It is worth highlighting that occasional anesthetic practice in children, defined as less than i00 cases per anesthetist, results in a five-fold increase in the risk of complications when compared with regular pediatric anesthesia practice, as well as in a higher frequency of severe complications in one out of every five infants 9. Additionally, in routine outpatient surgery such as adenotonsillectomy, better operating room efficiency is reported when the specialist has formal training in pediatric anesthesiology 10; the same is true in children undergoing anesthesia for endoscopic gastroenterology procedures with anesthesia-controlled time when the provider is a pediatric anesthetist, reducing costs and improving efficiency 11.
Competencies in pediatric anesthesiology
The European Training Requirements in Anesthesiology set forth the minimum requirements for anesthesiology residents and anesthetists with training in pediatric anesthesia. For anesthesia residents, the proposed requirements include exposure to at least preoperative assessment, general anesthesia in children over one year of age, pediatric surgery, otolaryngological and airway surgery, ophthalmology, orthopedic surgery, neurosurgery, neonatal surgery, dentofacial surgery, anesthesia outside the operating room, and acute pain management. For anesthetists with formal training the requirements include clinical tools and competencies for the management of newborns and children under 1 year of age, peripheral regional and neuroaxial anesthesia, invasive and advanced airway management, advanced resuscitation, nutrition and intravenous fluid management, transfusion strategies, ultrasound-guided vascular accesses, advanced acute pain management, chronic pain management, transport and stabilization, intensive neonatal and pediatric intensive care, organ transplantation, and cardiothoracic anesthesia 12.
Similarly, the American Council of Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) sets forth core competencies for specialists, pediatric anesthetists included. These competencies include compassionate, appropriate and effective patient care; comprehensive medical knowledge; professionalism marked by ethics and acceptance of diversity; system-based practice for efficient resource management; practice-based learning and improvement, providing opportunities for research; and, finally communication and interpersonal engagement skills 13.
Likewise, in March 2023, the Society of Pediatric Anesthesiology set up a workgroup to determine the future of pediatric anesthesia training. It settled around eight domains that need to be taught to all pediatric anesthetists, as follows: practice management, patient safety, oversight skills, medical education, communication skills, quality improvement, leadership, and basic research fundamentals 14.
In turn, the Colombian Society of Anesthesiology and Resuscitation (S.C.A.R.E.) considers pediatric anesthesia as a specific competency requiring in-depth training 15.
Recognition of the relevance of pediatric anesthesia training in the world
Growing recognition of pediatric anesthesia and its risks -especially in high-risk patients such as neonates, children under two years of age, high-risk surgeries or children with significant comorbidities- have led surgical teams, hospital administrators and even informed parents to demand the presence of experienced anesthetists with training in perioperative care of children 1 Therefore, defining safe anesthetic practice and increasing perioperative care standards in children must be a central topic for the international community; likewise, in the local setting, it must be a priority within the framework of public health policy and call for the promotion of education and awareness of safe and quality practices for the pediatric population 9.
Based on the arguments mentioned above and the aim of improving education and training - particularly of academic leaders - and furthering the advancement of new knowledge that would improve outcomes in the care of pediatric patients 10, the first specialization programs in pediatric anesthesiology were created in the 1950s and 1960s.
Historically, pediatric anesthesiology as a subspecialty in the United States dates back to the post Second World War II years, with its beginnings attributed to physician Robert M. Smith, in Boston Children's Hospital 5. In the 1980s, the number of specialization programs with a duration of 6 to 12 months began to increase. Later, in 1987, the Society for Pediatric Anesthesia came into being with the aim of promoting quality anesthesia and perioperative care and alleviate pain in children through the development of clinical care models, research, and education focused on pediatric anesthesia and critical care 5. Then, in 1997, pediatric anesthesiology was recognized as a subspecialty by the ACGME in the United States, in such a way that by 2013 there were already 5i pediatric anesthesiology specialization programs accredited in the country, with 215 places available. In October of the same year, a certification exam in pediatric anesthesia was first carried out, with 1500 applicants coming forth 5.
It is worth mentioning that, in 2014, 230 candidates applied to the 53 pediatric anesthesia specialization programs in the United States, reflecting the growing demand in the specialty and attracting i0% of the students graduating from anesthesiology programs 16. In 2020, 216 specialists graduated from the 60 formal pediatric anesthesia specialization programs in the United States 17.
Currently, the Society for Pediatric Anesthesia is even discussing options for strengthening clinical and non-clinical competencies during pediatric anesthesia training 18. These include a two-year training program, the standardization of the minimum number of cases required 19, the establishment of the essential components to optimize training time and on-the-job training as a strategy to acquire work-relevant clinical skills considered non-essential during training 18. Likewise, formal pediatric anesthesiology programs are exploring new strategies and teaching settings for this subspecialty, including a simulation-based training campus for acquiring technical and non-technical skills 20, the creation of a national online curriculum covering non-clinical competencies, as well as the design and implementation of an evaluation and feed-back strategy framed within a competency-based education model 21.
Concomitantly, in 1996, the World Federation of Societies of Anesthesiologists (WFSA) created the advanced pediatric anesthesiology training program with a duration of 6 to 12 months, which included two months of cardiac anesthesia, at a cost to the WFSA of approximately US $5,000 per scholar. The program was carried out in countries with higher levels of medical development, so that grantee anesthetists could receive training in their own language and return to their countries of origin after completing the program in order to lead promotion and education in the specialty 22. The program was first established in Santiago de Chile in 1999, with a duration of 6 to 12 months during which students rotated through different areas of the specialty, acquiring competencies in pediatric anesthesia, cardiac anesthesia, invasive monitoring, preanesthesia assessment, risk stratification, blood-sparing techniques, regional anesthesia, acute pain control, anesthesia for organ transplantation, and airway management 23. By 2018, 28 anesthetists from countries like Bolivia, Paraguay, Ecuador, Guatemala, Nicaragua, Peru, Honduras, Colombia, Dominican Republic, Venezuela and El Salvador had taken the training program; of them, 75% were working as pediatric anesthetists in their country of origin, creating a Latin-American network of experts in pediatric anesthesia 24. Given the success of the program, it was later expanded to Africa and Asia. At present, the WFSA advanced pediatric anesthesia program exists in countries like India, Kenya, Morocco, Serbia, Chile and Mexico 22.
In India, for example, the Indian Association of Paediatric Anaesthesiologists (IAPA) reports that the pediatric anesthesiology specialization offered by the government and private hospitals in approximately 24 programs focuses on anesthetists who wish to acquire experience in the pediatric population, improving the quality of care and promoting training in this discipline 1.
As far as Europe is concerned, there is no homogenous frame of reference for pediatric anesthesia training, despite the fact that training programs for the specialty in the continent dates back to the 1990s, with the creation of the Federation of European Associations of Paediatric Anaesthesiologists (FEAPA), now called European Society for Paediatric Anesthesiology (ESPA) 6. Initially, they recommended one year of training to achieve the expert level, plus an additional year, including 6 months of pediatric intensive care, to reach the specialist level. However, this curricular structure was implemented only in the United Kingdom, the Scandinavian countries and France 6. But following the publication of the APRICOT study in 2018, given the prevalence of congenital or complex diseases in children, and the anesthesia-related complication rates in this population, the consensus is that the pediatric anesthesia subspecialization program requires an absolute minimum of two years in order to achieve certification in the European continent 6.
In contrast, in France, children under 3 years of age must be given anesthesia by certified pediatric anesthetists 9. This landscape reflects the degree of importance gained by pediatric anesthesiology in some societies, resulting in the need to formalize its practice and promote its teaching as a subspecialty with the support of States, scientific communities, healthcare organizations and education institutions.
In Nairobi, Kenya, a training program in pediatric anesthesia was established in 2014 as a result of the collaboration between the University of Nairobi, the Kenya Society of Anesthesiologists and WFSA, as well as with the support of the Society for Pediatric Anesthesia, the Association of Paediatric Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland (APAGBI), and Smile Train 24. By 2018, this program had trained eleven anesthetists who are now leaders in this specialty in their countries of origin, strengthening educational and clinical practice and bringing perioperative care of children to a new level in this region of the world 24.
In Australia and New Zealand, training in pediatric anesthesiology has not been well defined given the absence of formal curricula. It has developed in the form of time-based training ranging between six months and two years, also with wide variation in terms of exposure to cases and acquired experiences and competencies, depending on location and form of teaching and training 25. Consequently, through collaboration among scientific societies, a pediatric anesthesia specialization program based on reliable professional activities is being developed 25.
There is also the Scandinavian experience. In Denmark, teaching of anesthesia in children under two years of age is not part of the official anesthesia curricular programs 9. For that reason, formal education in pediatric anesthesiology began in 2002 with a twelve-month program consisting of anesthetic management in children and pediatric intensive care. In this program, a committee assigns students to high level pediatric hospitals where they develop their entire training. Additionally, they have established two years of age as the threshold for exclusive management by trained anesthetists 26.
In Japan, although pediatric anesthesia started back in 1965 and there is a Japanese Society of Pediatric Anesthesiology, this discipline is still not recognized as a subspecialty. Even if training in pediatric anesthesia is mandatory when it comes to deliver care to children, the lack of university hospitals with sufficient numbers of cases limits the development of formal education 27.
In Latin America, apart from the WFSA-sponsored programs in Chile and México, there are formal training programs at the Pequeno Príncipe Hospital in Brazil, the Garrahan Hospital in Argentina, the Federico Gómez Children's Hospital in Mexico, and the National Children's Hospital in Costa Rica. In the rest of the region, training is offered after non-standardized residence programs 7.
Pediatric anesthesiology training in Colombia
In Colombia, according to the National Higher Education Information System (SNIES), there are 24 anesthesia programs with qualified registration which graduate approximately 120 anesthetists every year. During the three or four years of training, students dedicate between two to five consecutive or non-consecutive months to rotate in pediatric anesthesia 7. Likewise, all anesthesia programs cover pediatric anesthesia: as a one-time course during the entire residency in 9i% of the programs; in the form of two different rotations; and even one of them has the training during the entire three-year residency 15. Additionally, the Colombian Society of Anesthesiology and Resuscitation (SCARE) reports that 18% of the anesthesia residency programs include a course on pediatric intensive care, while 40% include neonatal anesthesia courses in their curricula 28. This is similar to the training offered in North America, where students are required to complete a rotation in pediatric anesthesia for a minimum of two to six consecutive or non-consecutive months during their residency. During this time, they need to administer anesthesia to a total of i00 patients up to 12 years of age, 20 of them under 3 years of age, and 5 under three months of age 10. In Colombia, these target have not been defined and they would be theoretical given that a rotation does not mean that the training plan will be accomplished, meaning that it cannot ensure competency in the area because Colombian hospitals rarely have sufficient subspecialty cases to ensure exposure to the representative cases 29.
On the other hand, Colombia has faced significant challenges for the implementation of formal pediatric anesthesiology training as the creation of a university subspecialty training program has not been possible given that it is not considered relevant by the Ministry of Education and the Ministry of Health and Social Protection. They base their view, first, on the lack of active programs in this discipline in the country and, second, on the assumption that a specialist graduating from an anesthesia residency program might have difficulty practicing the competencies of his/her specialty because of the emergence of new competing subspecialties 30.
However, it begs mentioning that during the period between 2003 and 2009, SCARE and Fundación Hospital Pediatrico La Misericordia (HOMI), in partnership with other hospitals such as Fundación Cardiovascular in Bucaramanga, Fundación Valle de Lili in Cali and Fundación Cardioinfantil, Clinica del Niño and Instituto Roosevelt in Bogota, implemented a one-year informal pediatric anesthesia education program which included rotations in operating rooms, radiology, neonatal intensive care unit, general and cardiovascular pediatric intensive care unit, pediatric cardiovascular anesthesia, anesthesia for pediatric transplants, and pain management. The scientific society certified six anesthetists. However, admission was not widely publicized and the program was eventually closed due to the failed attempt at joining a higher education institution for formalization, as reported by Felipe Carmona (HOMI) and Piedad Echeverry (Instituto Roosevelt), physicians who trained under the program, in personal communication with the author of this article in 2023.
For this reason, other options for pediatric anesthesia training have been explored in Colombia, including continuing medical education and professional development. One such example is the online course on pediatric anesthesiology offered by the Colombian Society of Anesthesiology and Resuscitation (S.C.A.R.E.).
Additionally, S.C.A.R.E.'s National Pediatric Anesthesia Committee, as part of a work plan for the development of continuing education projects, began its publication in 2015 of the Pediatric Anesthesia Treatise 31, with the participation of 95 authors from 8 countries and of various medical specialties such as anesthesiology, pediatrics and pediatric pulmonology 32. Opportunities for updates in this discipline have also been offered in the form of symposia and congresses in partnership with higher education institutions, such as the Southern Colombian Congress of Pediatric Anesthesia and Critical Child Care organized in 2015 by Universidad Surcolombiana and the Hernando Moncaleano Perdomo University Hospital, and the First International Congress of Pediatric Anesthesia organized also in 2015 by the Cundinamarca Society of Anesthesiology, the National University of Colombia and HOMI.
Also in order to promote training in pediatric anesthesia, the SAFE Paediatrics (Safer Anesthesia from Education) course was held in 2019 in the city of Medellin. This worldwide initiative, launched in 2011 by the Society for Pediatric Anesthesia and the World Federation of Societies of Anesthesiologists (WFSA), seeks to provide anesthetists the essential knowledge and the tools needed to offer competent and safe care to the population, even in very low resource settings. It also incorporates trainer training in order to create a sustainable education model that can be adopted by national health systems. Specifically in pediatric anesthesia, this three-day course covers anesthesia for common elective procedures and emergency conditions in children, pain management, fluid resuscitation, pediatric and neonatal advanced life support, as well as management of trauma in children.
Despite multiple undertakings to promote formal or continuing education in pediatric anesthesia in Colombia, there is a paucity of research work in this area due to the absence of training programs, the dearth of resources, heavy workloads and the lack of a research culture. However, there is undoubtedly a felt need to bolster this practice in order to generate applied knowledge in our own setting and to improve the quality of care for this population. It is clear that adult research cannot be extrapolated to children, that safety studies are needed and that research is an integral part of anesthesia education 33.
In Colombia, like in most low and medium income countries, it is impossible to recommend that children receive anesthesia only from a pediatric anesthetist given the political, social and training circumstances. However, what is feasible is to identify high risk patients such as neonates and children under two years of age, children undergoing high risk surgeries or critically ill children in whom the intervention of a trained anesthetist is definitely advisable. This does not mean, however, that the general anesthetist lacks the competency to provide perioperative care for common elective procedures which do not entail a high risk, or in emergency situations, when finding a specialist with training in pediatric anesthesia might be challenging 1. The creation of a specialization training program in this discipline promotes continuing education and regular training for the profession and for general anesthetists practicing in different areas, so that they can hone their skills and basic competencies throughout their entire professional practice 9.
CONCLUSION
The importance of quality surgical care for the pediatric population is recognized worldwide. Therefore, from the perspective of medical education relevance, it is essential to advocate strengthening of pediatric anesthesia training with the aim of providing safe and good quality perioperative care to Colombian children as well as to more than 117 million children in Latin America, recognizing the complexity of their physiological and anatomical conditions, as well as their pathologies and surgical procedures. This requires the availability of curricular processes on which to base training in pediatric anesthesia competencies and which will result in the promotion of research and continuing education for human resources in health.