TY - JOUR
T1 - Incidence of cognitive errors in difficult airway management
T2 - an inference human factors study from the Pediatric Difficult Intubation Registry
AU - the PeDI Collaborative Group
AU - Bordini, Martina
AU - Orsini, Luca
AU - Li, Simon Y.W.
AU - Olsen, Julia
AU - Stein, Mary Lyn
AU - Sarmiento Argüello, Lina A.
AU - Hesselink, Emily B.
AU - Lee, Angela C.
AU - Echeverry, Piedad C.
AU - Lee, Lisa K.
AU - O'Brien, Elizabeth M.
AU - Dalal, Priti G.
AU - Hunyady, Agnes
AU - Whyte, Simon
AU - Peterson, Melissa Brooks
AU - Garcia-Marcinkiewicz, Annery G.
AU - Kovatsis, Pete
AU - Peyton, James
AU - Von Ungern-Sternberg, Britta S.
AU - Fiadjoe, John
AU - Matava, Clyde
AU - Bruins, Benjamin B.
AU - Stricker, Paul
AU - Laverriere, Elizabeth K.
AU - Lockman, Justin L.
AU - Struyk, Brian
AU - Ward, Christopher
AU - Nishisaki, Akira
AU - Kodavatiganti, Ramesh
AU - Daly Guris, Rodrigo J.
AU - Sequera-Ramos, Luis
AU - Teen, Mark S.
AU - Oke, Ayodele
AU - Hsu, Grace
AU - Lingappan, Arul
AU - Park, Raymond S.
AU - Egbuta, Chinyere
AU - Battles, Rhae
AU - Bocanegra, Ashley D.
AU - Goldfarb, Tally
AU - Kiss, Edgar E.
AU - Szmuk, Peter
AU - Mireles, Sam
AU - Murray, Andrea
AU - Jain, Ranu
AU - Khan, Sabina A.
AU - Holmes, Christopher
AU - McCann, Alexander
AU - Sabato, Stefano
AU - Dalesio, Nicholas
AU - Greenberg, Robert
AU - Desai, Sapna
AU - Lucero, Angela
AU - Schrock, Charles
AU - Marsh, Jennifer
AU - Peterson, Melissa Brooks
AU - Johnson Lee, Amy Colleen
AU - Bhattacharya, Somaletha
AU - Burjek, Nicholas E.
AU - Rosander, Sondra
AU - Samba, Sindhu
AU - Jagannathan, Narasimhan
AU - Lardner, David
AU - Crockett, Christy
AU - Robertson, Sara
AU - Sathyamoorthy, Madhankumar
AU - Chao, Franklin
AU - Patel, Jasmine
AU - Sharma, Aarti
AU - Pérez-Pradilla, Carolina
AU - Singh, Neeta
AU - Taicher, Brad
AU - Sommerfield, David
AU - Hauser, Neil
AU - Lewkowitz-Shpuntoff, Hilana
AU - Castro, Pilar
AU - Riveros Perez, N. Ricardo
AU - Vega, Eduardo
AU - González, Alejandro
AU - Ostermann, Paola
AU - Meserve, Jonathan
AU - Lord, Charles (Ted)
AU - Leite, Fernanda
AU - Rubin, Kasia
AU - Valairucha, Songyos
AU - Ayad, Ihab
AU - Rehman, Mohamed
AU - Fernandez, Allison
AU - Zamora, Lillian
AU - Tran, Thanh
AU - Anspach, Taylor
AU - Shaik, Sadiq
AU - Szolnoki, Judit
AU - Mathew, Preethy J.
AU - Yaddanapudi, Sandhya
AU - Sen, Indu
AU - Gupta, Aakriti
AU - Handlogten, Kathryn
AU - Sroka, J. Michael
AU - Quintao, Vinicius Caldeira
AU - Weatherall, Andrew D.
AU - Templeton, T. Wesley
AU - Flynn, Stephen G.
AU - Nykiel-Bailey, Sydney
AU - Garcia-Marcinkiewicz, Annery G.
AU - Padiyath, Febina
AU - Matuszczak, Maria
AU - Park, Raymond S.
AU - Olomu, Patrick N.
AU - Mitchell, Kelsey
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 British Journal of Anaesthesia
PY - 2025/11
Y1 - 2025/11
N2 - Background: Cognitive errors are known contributors to poor decision-making in healthcare. However, their incidence and extent of their contribution to negative outcomes during difficult airway management are unknown. We aimed to identify cognitive errors during paediatric difficult airway management using data from the Pediatric Difficult Intubation (PeDI) registry, to determine patient and clinician factors associated with these errors, and their contribution to complications. Methods: We conducted a retrospective analysis of the PeDI registry data including cases with at least three intubation attempts. Cognitive error definitions were adapted to airway management, and predefined clinical endpoints were used to identify cognitive errors. A subanalysis was performed for children weighing <5 kg. Our primary outcome was the overall incidence of cognitive errors. Secondary outcomes included the incidence of specific cognitive error subtypes, associations with patient and clinician factors, and the relationship between cognitive errors and complications. Results: Cognitive errors were identified in 17.4% (487/2801) of cases, with fixation errors being the most common (11.5%), followed by omission bias (5.9%) and overconfidence bias (4.5%). Non-anaesthesiologist clinicians had the highest odds of cognitive errors. The presence of at least one cognitive error was independently associated with a higher risk of complications (adjusted odds ratio, 1.86 [95% confidence interval, 1.53–2.27]; P<0.001), and multiple errors increased the likelihood of severe complications (adjusted odds ratio, 2.48 [95% confidence interval, 1.24–4.94]; P=0.01). Conclusions: Cognitive errors occurred in nearly 20% of paediatric difficult airway encounters and were linked to increased complications. Further research should refine error definitions and develop mitigation strategies to improve outcomes.
AB - Background: Cognitive errors are known contributors to poor decision-making in healthcare. However, their incidence and extent of their contribution to negative outcomes during difficult airway management are unknown. We aimed to identify cognitive errors during paediatric difficult airway management using data from the Pediatric Difficult Intubation (PeDI) registry, to determine patient and clinician factors associated with these errors, and their contribution to complications. Methods: We conducted a retrospective analysis of the PeDI registry data including cases with at least three intubation attempts. Cognitive error definitions were adapted to airway management, and predefined clinical endpoints were used to identify cognitive errors. A subanalysis was performed for children weighing <5 kg. Our primary outcome was the overall incidence of cognitive errors. Secondary outcomes included the incidence of specific cognitive error subtypes, associations with patient and clinician factors, and the relationship between cognitive errors and complications. Results: Cognitive errors were identified in 17.4% (487/2801) of cases, with fixation errors being the most common (11.5%), followed by omission bias (5.9%) and overconfidence bias (4.5%). Non-anaesthesiologist clinicians had the highest odds of cognitive errors. The presence of at least one cognitive error was independently associated with a higher risk of complications (adjusted odds ratio, 1.86 [95% confidence interval, 1.53–2.27]; P<0.001), and multiple errors increased the likelihood of severe complications (adjusted odds ratio, 2.48 [95% confidence interval, 1.24–4.94]; P=0.01). Conclusions: Cognitive errors occurred in nearly 20% of paediatric difficult airway encounters and were linked to increased complications. Further research should refine error definitions and develop mitigation strategies to improve outcomes.
KW - airway management
KW - bias
KW - cognitive error
KW - difficult airway
KW - human factors
KW - human performance
KW - medical error
KW - paediatric difficult airway
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105007093808
U2 - 10.1016/j.bja.2025.04.033
DO - 10.1016/j.bja.2025.04.033
M3 - Article
C2 - 40447486
AN - SCOPUS:105007093808
SN - 0007-0912
VL - 135
SP - 1499
EP - 1510
JO - British Journal of Anaesthesia
JF - British Journal of Anaesthesia
IS - 5
ER -