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Occupation
NamesAnesthesiologist (US English)
Anaesthetist (British English)
Profession
Activity sectors
Medicine, science
Description
Education required
See selection and training
Fields of
employment
Science, healthcare, research and development
Related jobs
Physician

An anesthesiologist is a physician [MD/DO] trained in anesthesia and perioperative medicine.

The title of the role varies between countries. In countries following the practice of North America, those specializing in the field are termed anesthesiologists, but in the United Kingdom and current or former member countries of the Commonwealth of Nations, such providers use the title anesthetist instead.

The length and format of training may vary from country to country. For physicians, a four-year residency is required after four years of medical school training to be awarded a medical degree. A four year bachelors degree is required before medical school for a total of 12 years of education. Many anesthesiologists do an additional fellowship year to subspecialize in critical care medicine, cardiac, pediatric, obstetric, or regional anesthesia. Anesthesiologists in training spend this time gaining experience in various different subspecialties of anesthesiology and undertake various advanced postgraduate examinations and skill assessments. These lead to the award of a specialist qualification at the end of their training indicating that they are an expert in the field.

During preoperative evaluation, in consultation with the surgical team, anesthesiologists create an anesthetic plan tailored to each individual patient taking into consideration the patient’s medical history and the type of surgical procedure planned. This may include invasive monitoring (TEE, CVP, arterial pressure), neuraxial nerve blocks (spinal or epidural), peripheral nerve blocks (selectively anesthetizing a specific part of the body), and/or various levels of sedation including reversible unconsciousness known as “General Anesthesia.” Anesthesiologists are acute care specialists and as such provide intensive care techniques perioperatively as the experts of airway management, intraoperative life support, pain control, intraoperative diagnoses, stabilization, and proper postoperative medical management of patients. An anesthesiologist's scope of practice also involves in-hospital and pre-hospital emergencies, work within intensive care units, acute pain units, and chronic pain consultations.