The goal of this observational study is to measure the cognitive load (mental effort) of anesthesia nurses during real surgical procedures at Hospital Clínic de Barcelona, Spain. The main questions it aims to answer are: * Does cognitive load vary across the three phases of anesthetic care (induction, maintenance, and emergence/recovery)? * Is cognitive load higher during general anesthesia than during spinal anesthesia with sedation? * How do surgical specialty and patient complexity relate to cognitive load? * How does monitor alarm perception relate to cognitive load during surgery? Participants (anesthesia nurses) will complete the NASA Task Load Index (NASA-TLX) questionnaire - a validated 6-item tool measuring mental effort - three times per surgical case: after induction or spinal block, during maintenance, and after patient awakening or sedation reversal. They will also answer 4 brief questions about alarm management at the end of each case. No changes are made to clinical care. Participation adds approximately 11 minutes per surgical case.
Anesthesia nurses manage up to 72 tasks per hour during surgical procedures, including vital sign monitoring, drug administration, airway management, alarm response, and surgical team coordination. Despite this high workload, the cognitive load of anesthesia nurses has received little scientific attention. Most studies focus on simulation rather than real clinical settings. This prospective observational study uses the Raw NASA Task Load Index (NASA-TLX) to quantify subjective cognitive load in anesthesia nurses across three phases of anesthetic care (T1: post-induction/spinal block; T2: maintenance; T3: extubation/wake up), comparing general anesthesia (endotracheal intubation or laryngeal mask) versus spinal anesthesia with sedation. Additionally, an exploratory module examines nurses' perception and management of monitor alarms and its association with cognitive load. This is the first European study to measure cognitive load in anesthesia nurses using a validated instrument in a real surgical setting.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
50
The Raw NASA Task Load Index (NASA-TLX) is a validated self-report questionnaire measuring subjective cognitive load across six dimensions: mental demand, physical demand, temporal demand, performance, effort, and frustration (scale 0-100). Administered three times per surgical case (T1, T2, T3) by the participating anesthesia nurse. Additionally, four questions about monitor alarm perception and management are completed after T3.
Hospital Clínic de Barcelona
Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain
Global Raw NASA-TLX Score
Subjective cognitive load measured using the Raw NASA Task Load Index (NASA-TLX), calculated as the arithmetic mean of six subscales (mental demand, physical demand, temporal demand, performance, effort, and frustration), each rated on a 0-100 scale. Administered three times per surgical case: after induction or spinal block (T1), during maintenance (T2), and after extubation or end of sedation (T3). Study duration: approximately 8 months.
Time frame: At three time points per surgical case: T1 (5 minutes post-induction/spinal block), T2 (during maintenance, before surgical closure), and T3 (5 minutes after extubation/end of sedation ).
NASA-TLX Subscale Scores
Individual scores for each of the six NASA-TLX subscales (mental demand, physical demand, temporal demand, performance, effort, and frustration), each rated on a 0-100 scale, to identify which dimensions of cognitive load predominate at each anesthetic phase.
Time frame: Assessed at three intraoperative time points per surgical case: 5 minutes post-induction or post-spinal block, during maintenance before surgical closure, and 5 minutes post-extubation or end of sedation, over approximately 8 months of data collection.
Monitor Alarm Perception Visual Analog Scale (VAS)
Exploratory measure of nurses' perceived alarm burden during each surgical case, rated on a visual analog scale from 0 (not at all) to 100 (extremely). Assessed after patient awakening or sedation reversal. Used to explore the association between alarm perception and cognitive load (NASA-TLX score).
Time frame: Assessed once per surgical case, immediately after patient awakening or sedation reversal, over approximately 8 months of data collection.
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.