Made for This Moment
When a procedure takes an unexpected turn, the training and judgment of a physician anesthesiologist are what patients rely on.

Preparation you may never see, until you need it
A physician anesthesiologist completes 12 to 14 years of education and training, including 12,000 to 16,000 hours of clinical training. That preparation is easy to overlook on a routine day and impossible to replace on a hard one.
It is the difference between recognizing a crisis as it begins and missing it until it is too late, between a complication managed in seconds and one that spirals.
When seconds matter
Physician anesthesiologists across South Carolina wrote down what happened in the moments a procedure turned critical.
A heart that stopped beating during a pacemaker placement. A torn pulmonary artery during cancer surgery. A patient with sepsis whose survival hinged on one fast decision. In each account, a physician anesthesiologist recognized what was happening and acted, and a patient went home.
Read the accounts in the physicians' own words.
Physicians Save Lives When Seconds Matter
Firsthand accounts from South Carolina physician anesthesiologists on the moments when training and judgment made the difference for a patient.
Keep exploring
Understand the care behind your procedure and how to prepare for it.
Clear answers before your procedure
Plain-language guides to help patients and families understand anesthesia care.
