Certified Registered Nursing Anesthetist
(CRNA) Career Resources
Anesthesia is the loss of sensation and usually of consciousness
without loss of vital functions. This is artificially produced by the administration
of one or more agents that block the passage of pain impulses along nerve
pathways to the brain.
A Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist (CRNA) works with a team of health
care professionals to provide care for patients undergoing procedures requiring
anesthesia. A CRNA typically administers care to patients in a surgical,
emergency or post-operative environment. Anesthesia nursing is practiced
by nurses who have formal, post-secondary education and who function in
highly specialized roles.
Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetists (CRNA's) are anesthesia specialists
who administer approximately 65% of the 26 million anesthetics given to
patients each year in the United States. CRNA's are the sole anesthesia
providers in approximately 50% of all hospitals and nearly 70% of the rural
hospitals in the United States.
CRNA's provide anesthetics to patients in collaboration with surgeons,
anesthesiologists, dentists, podiatrists and other qualified healthcare
professionals. When anesthesia is administered by a nurse anesthetist,
it is recognized as the practice of nursing; when administered by an anesthesiologist,
it is recognized as the practice of medicine.
Managed care plans recognize CRNA's for providing high-quality anesthesia
care with reduced expense to patients and insurance companies. The cost-efficiency
of CRNA's helps keep escalating medical costs down. Legislation passed
by Congress in 1986 made nurse anesthetists the first nursing specialty
to be accorded direct reimbursement rights under the Medicare program.
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