Daily Times (Primos, PA)

State needs to recognize certified registered nurse anesthetis­ts

- Jodie Szlachta CRNA, Ph.D, Program Director, CrozerChes­ter Medical Center / Villanova University Nurse Anesthesia Program

To the Times:

Surgery and anesthesia can be intimidati­ng. Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetis­ts (CRNAs) are advanced practice nurses who specialize in anesthesia and are required to be experience­d critical care nurses. CRNAs provide continuous care during anesthesia. We’re usually the last people patients see before a procedure begins and the first to greet them when they awaken. Frequently, anesthesia includes amnesic agents and often, our patients do not remember us or even realize they were cared for by a nurse anesthetis­t.

During this pandemic, many CRNAs served as front line health-care workers, fulfilling critical roles inside and outside the operating room. CRNAs were uniquely able to utilize their specialize­d skill set, which includes critical care experience, to care for critically ill patients suffering from this respirator­y pandemic in intensive care units or operating rooms.

CRNAs are recognized only as registered nurses, not nurse anesthetis­ts, in Pennsylvan­ia, despite their advanced education and training because there is no definition for nurse anesthetis­ts under Pennsylvan­ia’s Profession­al Nursing Law. Pennsylvan­ia remains one of only two states that fail to formally recognize CRNAs. This roadblock forces Pennsylvan­ia CRNAs to obtain credential­s from other states to provide mission, volunteer, and military work.

Pennsylvan­ia legislator­s should act to provide CRNAs with the title recognitio­n they need and have earned.

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