Handover to recovery

Why recovery handover matters

  • Recovery (PACU) is a high-risk transition point: residual anaesthetic drugs, airway risk, bleeding, and pain can change quickly.
  • A clear, consistent handover reduces missed information and delays in treating pain, nausea, hypotension, or airway obstruction.
  • Aim: the recovery nurse knows what happened, what to watch for, and what you want done next.

When and how to hand over (practical basics)

  • Do the handover face-to-face at the bedside, with the patient present, once monitors are on and you have initial observations.
  • Use a structured format (e.g., SBAR: Situation, Background, Assessment, Recommendation) to avoid omissions.
  • Minimise distractions: pause non-urgent tasks, ensure the receiver is ready, and confirm key points were understood.
  • If you must leave early, ensure another anaesthetist takes over responsibility and completes the handover.

Start with immediate safety: ABC and monitoring

  • Airway: what airway device is in/out, any difficulty, current airway concerns (snoring/obstruction, swelling, blood).
  • Breathing: oxygen delivery method and target saturations; ventilation concerns (COPD, OSA, obesity, residual paralysis).
  • Circulation: blood pressure/heart rate trends, rhythm issues, bleeding risk, IV access and fluids running.
  • Disability: level of consciousness, pain score, nausea, temperature, blood glucose if relevant.
  • Exposure: drains, dressings, positioning issues, pressure areas, tourniquet time if relevant.

Minimum dataset to include (what recovery needs every time)

  • Patient identifiers: name, DOB/NHS number (or local identifier), allergies, weight if relevant to dosing.
  • Procedure and side/site: what operation was done and any intra-op events that change risk.
  • Anaesthetic technique: GA/neuraxial/regional/sedation; airway type (ETT/LMA), size, and whether it was easy or difficult.
  • Analgesia given: paracetamol/NSAID/opioids (drug + dose + time), local infiltration, blocks (type, side, catheter).
  • Antiemetics given: drug + dose; history of PONV/motion sickness if relevant.
  • Antibiotics and other key drugs: timing, tranexamic acid, steroids, anticoagulants if given/withheld.
  • Fluids and blood: total IV fluids, estimated blood loss, urine output if measured, transfusions and current Hb if known.
  • Lines and devices: cannula size/site, arterial line, central line, epidural, nerve catheter, drains, urinary catheter.
  • Current status: latest observations, oxygen requirement, pain/nausea level, temperature, any concerns right now.
  • Plan: what you want next (e.g., analgesia plan, BP targets, oxygen/CPAP, blood tests, escalation triggers).

Airway and respiratory specifics (common first-time scenarios)

  • Difficult airway: clearly state what made it difficult, what worked, and what to do if obstruction occurs (e.g., jaw thrust, OPA/NPA, call anaesthetist early).
  • OSA/obesity: consider higher risk of obstruction and hypoventilation; specify oxygen plan and whether CPAP should be used.
  • Residual neuromuscular block: confirm reversal given and clinical recovery; warn recovery to watch for shallow breathing, desaturation, weak cough.
  • Aspiration risk or regurgitation event: state if occurred/suspected, what was done, and what monitoring is needed (oxygen, CXR only if clinically indicated).

Pain handover (make it actionable)

  • Give a simple stepwise plan: what has been given, what can be repeated, and what to avoid (e.g., morphine sensitivity, renal impairment and NSAIDs).
  • Regional/neuraxial: document block type, side, time performed, expected duration, and any complications (e.g., paraesthesia, vascular puncture).
  • Epidural/spinal: include drug concentration/rate/bolus settings, sensory level if known, and hypotension/urinary retention risk.
  • If pain is expected to be severe, pre-empt: prescribe rescue analgesia and consider early review rather than repeated small doses without a plan.

Nausea, delirium, and sedation

  • PONV risk: mention history and what prophylaxis was given; provide a clear rescue antiemetic plan (different class if possible).
  • Sedation: state any long-acting opioids/benzodiazepines given; warn about delayed respiratory depression (especially with OSA).
  • Agitation/delirium: mention if patient was confused pre-op, alcohol withdrawal risk, or emergence delirium; suggest calm environment and early review if unsafe.

Bleeding, fluids, and haemodynamics

  • State estimated blood loss and whether bleeding is ongoing/expected (e.g., ENT, urology, obstetrics, major orthopaedics).
  • Give haemodynamic trends: “needed metaraminol boluses” or “stable throughout” is more useful than a single BP number.
  • Specify targets: e.g., “keep SBP 100–140” or “MAP >65” (tailor to patient: head injury, vascular surgery, chronic hypertension).
  • If significant blood loss: say what blood products were given, what is available, and whether repeat Hb/coagulation is needed.

Regional blocks and local anaesthetic safety

  • State total local anaesthetic dose and site(s), especially if multiple blocks/infiltration were used.
  • Warn about local anaesthetic systemic toxicity (LAST): early signs include tinnitus, metallic taste, agitation; severe signs include seizures/arrhythmias.
  • If a catheter is in place: label it, document infusion details, and clarify who manages it (acute pain team/anaesthetics).

Escalation and responsibility

  • Make it clear who to call and when: anaesthetist, surgeon, acute pain team, ICU outreach.
  • Give explicit triggers: increasing oxygen requirement, repeated airway obstruction, persistent hypotension, uncontrolled pain, excessive bleeding, reduced consciousness.
  • Do not leave recovery until the patient is stable and the recovery nurse is happy with the plan (or you have escalated appropriately).
What is a “good” recovery handover in one line?

A structured summary of what happened, what the patient needs now, and what problems to watch for (plus a clear plan and escalation triggers).

What does SBAR stand for and how do I use it quickly?

Situation (who/what/where), Background (relevant history + operation), Assessment (current ABC + key events), Recommendation (plan, targets, what to call you for).

What airway details are essential?

– Device used (ETT/LMA) and whether removed – Any difficulty and what worked – Current oxygen delivery and saturation target – Specific risks: OSA, aspiration, swelling/bleeding

How should I hand over analgesia so it’s safe and useful?

– What was given (drug, dose, time) – What is expected (mild/moderate/severe pain) – Rescue plan (what to give next and limits) – Any contraindications (e.g., avoid NSAIDs, opioid sensitivity) – Regional/neuraxial details if used

What should I say about neuromuscular blockade?

State the relaxant used, whether reversal was given, and any concern about residual weakness; ask recovery to watch for shallow breathing or repeated desaturation.

When should I mention antibiotics and VTE prophylaxis?

When timing matters (e.g., redosing needed, allergy issues) or if anticoagulation affects bleeding/neuraxial safety; note what was given or deliberately withheld.

What are common reasons patients deteriorate in recovery?

– Airway obstruction/hypoventilation – Hypotension (vasodilation, bleeding, neuraxial block) – Pain or PONV – Bleeding – Hypothermia

What are escalation triggers I should explicitly state?

– Recurrent airway obstruction or rising oxygen requirement – Persistent hypotension despite initial measures – Reduced consciousness not improving – Uncontrolled pain/PONV – Excessive bleeding or concern about surgical complication

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