
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Safety for children under anesthesia shouldn’t depend on luck or location. We walk through 100+ years of progress in pediatric anesthesia and focus on the next wave of innovations that can make first attempts safer, dosing smarter, and systems more reliable—especially for neonates and infants who face the highest risk.
We start with the historical milestones that changed outcomes: pulse oximetry, capnography, standardized monitoring, and the rise of pediatric training and ICUs. Then we examine where progress must accelerate. Video laryngoscopy is improving first-pass success and reducing desaturation by giving teams a brighter, shared view of the airway. Ultrasound enhanced by AI promises needle guidance, better vascular access, and more consistent regional anesthesia. Gastric ultrasound could reshape fasting practices, reducing hypotension, nausea, and anxiety while safeguarding against aspiration. Alongside these tools, processed EEG helps tailor volatile agents and propofol to the developing brain, pushing practice from population averages to precision dosing.
We also look ahead to artificial intelligence as a connective layer across perioperative care. Think risk stratification in the EHR, early-warning analytics for intraoperative instability, and smarter OR management that reduces cancellations and costs. With expert insights from pediatric anesthesiologist, Dr. Elizabeth Malinzak, we name the real barriers—training, cost, bias, regulation—and stake a claim for proactive safety science over reactive fixes. The goal is equitable, high-quality anesthesia care for every child, in every setting.
If this conversation resonates, follow the show, share it with a colleague, and leave a quick review. Your support helps spread practical tools and ideas that keep our smallest patients safe.
For show notes & transcript, visit our episode page at apsf.org: https://www.apsf.org/podcast/286-pediatric-anesthesia-safety-past-gains-next-frontiers/
© 2025, The Anesthesia Patient Safety Foundation
By Anesthesia Patient Safety Foundation4.4
2323 ratings
Safety for children under anesthesia shouldn’t depend on luck or location. We walk through 100+ years of progress in pediatric anesthesia and focus on the next wave of innovations that can make first attempts safer, dosing smarter, and systems more reliable—especially for neonates and infants who face the highest risk.
We start with the historical milestones that changed outcomes: pulse oximetry, capnography, standardized monitoring, and the rise of pediatric training and ICUs. Then we examine where progress must accelerate. Video laryngoscopy is improving first-pass success and reducing desaturation by giving teams a brighter, shared view of the airway. Ultrasound enhanced by AI promises needle guidance, better vascular access, and more consistent regional anesthesia. Gastric ultrasound could reshape fasting practices, reducing hypotension, nausea, and anxiety while safeguarding against aspiration. Alongside these tools, processed EEG helps tailor volatile agents and propofol to the developing brain, pushing practice from population averages to precision dosing.
We also look ahead to artificial intelligence as a connective layer across perioperative care. Think risk stratification in the EHR, early-warning analytics for intraoperative instability, and smarter OR management that reduces cancellations and costs. With expert insights from pediatric anesthesiologist, Dr. Elizabeth Malinzak, we name the real barriers—training, cost, bias, regulation—and stake a claim for proactive safety science over reactive fixes. The goal is equitable, high-quality anesthesia care for every child, in every setting.
If this conversation resonates, follow the show, share it with a colleague, and leave a quick review. Your support helps spread practical tools and ideas that keep our smallest patients safe.
For show notes & transcript, visit our episode page at apsf.org: https://www.apsf.org/podcast/286-pediatric-anesthesia-safety-past-gains-next-frontiers/
© 2025, The Anesthesia Patient Safety Foundation

1,866 Listeners

317 Listeners

542 Listeners

84 Listeners

46 Listeners

1,471 Listeners

2,446 Listeners

3,335 Listeners

1,150 Listeners

281 Listeners

261 Listeners

227 Listeners

19 Listeners

278 Listeners

8 Listeners