Anesthesia Patient Safety Podcast
The official podcast of the Anesthesia Patient Safety Foundation (APSF) is hosted by Alli Bechtel, MD, featuring the latest information and news in perioperative and anesthesia patient safety. The APSF podcast is intended for anesthesiologists, anesthetists, clinicians and other professionals with an interest in anesthesiology, and patient safety advocates around the world.
The Anesthesia Patient Safety Podcast delivers the best of the APSF Newsletter and website directly to you, so you can listen on the go! This includes some of the most important COVID-19 information on airway management, ventilators, personal protective equipment (PPE), drug information, and elective surgery recommendations.
Don't forget to check out APSF.org for the show notes that accompany each episode, and email us at podcast@APSF.org with your suggestions for future episodes. Visit us at APSF.org/podcast and at @APSForg on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram.
Anesthesia Patient Safety Podcast
#288 Forty Years Of Perioperative Medication Safety Progress
Seconds define outcomes in the OR, and medication safety lives in those seconds. We take you inside four decades of work by the Anesthesia Patient Safety Foundation to show how our field shifted from relying on vigilance to building systems that make the right action the easy action. Along the way, guest contributor, Dr. Elizabeth Rebello, shares why standardization, technology, and culture are not buzzwords but lifelines when a single clinician must select, prepare, and administer drugs under pressure.
We break down the STPC framework born from the 2010 Stoelting Conference—standardization, technology, pharmacy/pre-filled/pre-mixed, and culture—and translate it into real steps: standardized concentrations for high-alert medications, removal of concentrated lethal agents from the OR, barcode-based identification before draw-up or administration, and smart infusion pumps with user-friendly drug libraries. You’ll hear how prefilled syringes, automated dispensing, and clinical pharmacist integration reduce prep errors and free up attention when it matters most.
The story moves forward with the 2018 focus on drug safety profiles and the stubborn challenge of shortages. We explore actionable ideas: building a standing shortage committee, communicating substitutions fast, simplifying carts and labels when suppliers change, and embracing multimodal analgesia.
By the end, you’ll have a clear map of what to implement now—printed labels, prefilled syringes, smart-pump integration with your anesthesia record—and what to champion next across your institution. Subscribe and share with a colleague who leads in the OR. Then tell us: which safety step will you push across the finish line this year?
For show notes & transcript, visit our episode page at apsf.org: https://www.apsf.org/podcast/288-forty-years-of-perioperative-medication-safety-progress/
© 2026, The Anesthesia Patient Safety Foundation
Hello and welcome back to the Anesthesia Patient Safety Podcast. My name is Ali Bechtel and I'm your host. Thank you for joining us for another show. Happy New Year! We are excited for another year of the Anesthesia Patient Safety Podcast in 2026 with newsletter shows, interviews, conference reports, and more. To kick off the new year, we are returning to one of the most important considerations for keeping patients safe during anesthesia care, medication safety. Before we dive further into the episode today, we'd like to recognize Solventum, a major corporate supporter of APSF. Solventum has generously provided unrestricted support to further our vision that no one shall be harmed by anesthesia care. Thank you, Solventum. We wouldn't be able to do all that we do without you. Our featured article today is APSF's 40-year commitment to medication safety in anesthesia by Aubrey Simost Williams and colleagues. To follow along with us, head over to apsf.org and click on the newsletter heading. The first one down is the current issue. From there, scroll down to our featured article today. And I will include a link in the show notes as well. To help kick off the show today, we are going to hear from one of the authors. Here she is now.
SPEAKER_00:Hi, my name is Elizabeth Rabello, and I'm a professor of anesthesiology and perioperative medicine at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center. I also serve as the Executive Director for Anesthesiology, Critical Care and Pain Medicine for the Cancer Network.
SPEAKER_01:I asked Elizabeth why she wrote this article and why she is so passionate about this topic. Let's take a listen to what she had to say.
SPEAKER_00:I wrote this article to show that medication safety in anesthesia isn't standing still. Over the last 40 years, APSF has moved from be more careful to system solutions. We highlight milestone stolen conferences in 2010, 2018, and 2024. Real-world actions such as lookalike vials gallery, advocacy on trinxemic acid packaging to prevent intrafecal errors, and the return of standardized color coding. That's the ASTMD 4774 standard. This is a concise map of progress and the work still yet to cover. In the perioperative environment, one individual selects, prepares, and administers drugs within minutes. Unlike the inpatient model that separates those roles over hours. That compressed, high-stakes workflow makes us uniquely vulnerable to look-alike vials and variable concentrations. Patients deserve systems that make the right action the easy action. Standardized labels and concentrations, pre-filled syringes, barcode, dang ID, decision support, and adjust culture. This work directly prevents harm we can measure and tragedies we'll hopefully never have to see.
SPEAKER_01:Thank you so much to Elizabeth for helping to introduce this important topic. And now it's time to get into the article. Medication safety is one of the APSF's patient safety priorities. And it has been a priority since the APSF was founded in 1985. Let's take a look at the history of medication safety through the lens of the APSF. The 1987 APSF newsletter highlighted the problem of look-alike medication errors, and since that time, over 140 articles on medication safety have been published by the APSF newsletter. These articles highlight the importance of standardizing drug concentrations and equipment to reduce confusion and errors. Along with article publication, the APSF has worked hard to share research findings, best practices, and expert recommendations to help decrease medication errors and improve patient safety throughout the perioperative period. As we work towards improved medication safety, it is important to understand the unique challenges of medication administration in the operating room. Anesthesia professionals have a lot of responsibility here. We must select the medication and dose, prepare the medication, and administer the medication. In other hospital locations, these three functions are performed by three different groups of people. The physician, physician assistant, or nurse practitioner selects the medication and dose. The pharmacist or pharmacy technician prepares the medication, and the bedside nurse administers the medication. When medication administration is shared by independent team members, there is monitoring and double checking throughout the process. In the operating room, all of these steps are performed by the single anesthesia professional and may need to be done quickly when seconds count in life-saving situations. Check out Figure 1 in the article for a comparison of inpatient medication administration process and the operating room medication administration process. I will include this figure in the show notes as well. As you can see, inpatient medication administration may take over two hours with multiple clinicians involved and a couple of steps to double check the order. In the operating room, the anesthesia clinician bears the sole responsibility and the entire process may take less than five minutes. Medication safety during anesthesia care started with a focus on the behavior of the anesthesia professional, including educational programs to support close reading of labels, design work to improve readability of the labels, and consistent labeling and color coding of medications. Over the years, safety science has evolved. We have learned that paying attention alone will not prevent medication errors. Instead, the paradigm has shifted to forcing functions and creating feedback mechanisms and constraints. And this brings us to the 2010 APSF Stolting Conference on Medication Safety. We are going to review the past APSF conferences on medication safety to see what work has been done in the past so that we can chart out a course for where we are going in the future. The focus for the 2010 conference was the creation of an expert consensus-based framework for moving medication safety beyond clinician attentiveness and onto the STPC framework that includes standardization, technology, pharmacy, pre-filled, pre-mixed, and culture. We are going to review the 2010 recommendations now. You can follow along with us in Table 1 in the article. As you listen, take note of which of these recommendations you are following in your institution and which ones are not part of your routine practice. First up, here are the recommendations for standardization. High alert medications should be provided in standardized concentrations. Infusions should be administered using electronically controlled smart devices. Machine readable labels should be mandatory. Standardized placement of drugs within anesthesia workstations and protocols for infusion libraries should be implemented. No concentrated versions of potentially lethal agents should be present in the operating room. Next, here are the technology recommendations. Every anesthetizing location should have a mechanism to identify medications before drawing up or administering them. Systems should provide feedback, decision support, and documentation. Mandatory safety checklists and improved user interfaces on infusion pumps should be required. And training and certification for users of technology should be established. There are additional recommendations in the pharmacy pre-filled and pre-mixed category. These include routine provider-prepared medications should be discontinued. Clinical pharmacists should be integrated into the perioperative team. Standardized pre-prepared medication kits tailored to case types should be used. And automated dispensing machines should be deployed in the operating room suite. And finally, here are the recommendations related to culture. Establishing a just culture for reporting medication errors, including their misses, and learning from them. Implement mandatory education on medication safety, and promote cooperation across institutions, professional organizations, and accreditation agencies. As you can see, there's a lot of work to be done with the new framework. Let's see what changed in the eight years in-between medication safety stolting conferences. In 2018, the APSF Stolting Conference once again focused on medication safety. There were similar themes of the importance of standardization and human factors, but additional considerations included drug safety profiles and drug shortages. If you turn your attention to Table 2, we are going to review the 2018 recommendations now. This conference was almost eight years ago. What recommendations are you following at your institution when it comes to medication safety? What areas need improvement? First up, here are the recommendations for drug safety with the goals to identify and promote potentially safer anesthetics. Encourage research on nitrous oxide. Endorse the routine use of multimodal approaches for postoperative pain. Endorse continuous monitoring for ventilation for perioperative patients. And collaborate with the FDA and convene a workgroup to identify novel and potentially safer anesthetics. We are definitely making progress on some of these recommendations with enhanced recovery after surgery protocols that include multimodal analgesia options. There is also a new and potentially safer pain medication on the market that we talked about on the podcast this year. Suzetrogen is a new non-opioid medication used to treat moderate to severe pain in adults. Check out episode number 265 of this podcast for more information. Next, here are the recommendations for drug shortages with the goals to share information, simplify ordering, and establish contingency plans. Provide up-to-date drug shortage information on the APSF website. Encourage efforts to standardize concentrations of commonly used drugs. Encourage the FDA to develop a manufacturer supplier quality report card. Collaborate to encourage contracting processes that lead to shared risk for drug shortages and quality issues. Encourage the FDA to require manufacturers to have contingency plans to reduce the risks of drug shortages. The next section is reducing drug administration errors with goals to standardize procedures and doses, carefully document administration, and simplify preparation. Here are the recommendations. Encourage and endorse the use of pre-filled syringes and standardized carts. Encourage identifying and documenting drugs before administering them. Encourage the development of technologies that can identify and document administered drugs. And encourage efforts that promote perioperative work environments in which collaboration is encouraged and all individuals are encouraged to identify opportunities to improve patient safety. Finally, the last section is standardization and innovation with goals to collaborate across specialties and establish consensus for refined standards. Promote consensus on standardization of drug concentrations and labeling of drugs. Collaborate to encourage health systems to standardize the delivery process of high-risk drugs. Develop a grant for the development of standardized labeling of vials and syringes. Once again, as you can see from these recommendations, there is a lot of work still to be done to improve medication safety. After the 2018 Stolting Conference, the APSF presented panels at the 2019 ASA and New York State Society of Anesthesiologists annual meetings. We hope that you will check out the February 2020 article, APSF sponsored 2019 ASA panel on Practical Approaches to Improving Medication Safety by JW Beard and colleagues. I will include the link in the show notes as well. In this article, you can find actionable strategies for anesthesia professionals and other clinicians to improve medication safety throughout the perioperative period. The authors highlight that the goal for medication safety design requires the following considerations. Elimination of unnecessary options, like excessive concentrations, automate processes like wireless programming smart pumps, and physically prevent mistakes, like using the NRFIT connectors for noraxial anesthesia. Another focus in 2018 that remains critical for medication safety today is medication shortages. The authors provide several suggestions to approach this threat to patient safety. Does your anesthesia group have a medication shortage committee to review developing and resolving shortages? Do you have a plan for waste reduction, use reduction, supplier change, substitute identification, or formulation change? How are you communicating these changes to the clinicians in the operating room? Anesthesia professionals also need to be alert to changes in medications that appear in our medication carts as a result of drug shortages or supply disruptions. There were further efforts and education to increase awareness about challenges to medication safety with multiple APSF newsletter articles dedicated to this topic in 2020. The APSF also sponsored a summit in 2021 with the Institute for Safe Medication Practices. Check out the June 2022 APSF newsletter article, Highlights from the ISMP Summit, The Future of Perioperative Medication Safety, Charting Our Path Forward, by Elizabeth Robello and JW Beard. You can find the link in the show notes. During the summit, important questions were asked about labeling, barcode scanning, and smart infusion pump integration and optimization. Here are some examples of the labeling questions. Should handwritten labels ever be used for routine medication labeling? Should printing labels be considered best practice? Are you handwriting your own label now? If so, why? How do we get practitioners to recognize the risk associated with non-standard labeling practices and adopt safe labeling expectations? There is still more to talk about when it comes to medication safety. We still need to find out what happened at the 2024 APSF Stolting Conference and discuss other APSF activities dedicated to improving medication safety. Plus, we are going to hear from Elizabeth again. We hope that you will join us next week for the exciting conclusion. If you have any questions or comments from today's show, please email us at podcast at apf.org. Please keep in mind that the information in this show is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical or legal advice. We hope that you will visit apSF.org for detailed information and check out the show notes for links to all the topics we discussed today. As we begin 2026, thank you for being part of the Anesthesia Patient Safety Podcast community. Your commitment to learning, reflection, and safer care for every patient is what drives these conversations. If you found today's episode valuable, please subscribe, share it with a colleague, and help us reach others who care deeply about patient safety in anesthesia. Together, through open discussion and shared experience, we can continue to improve outcomes and elevate the standard of care. We look forward to learning with you throughout the year ahead. Until next time, stay vigilant so that no one shall be harmed by anesthesia care.