Pediatric Regional Anesthesia Survey in South Africa (PRASSA): A Descriptive, Cross-Sectional Survey of Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practices Among South African Anesthetists

Authors: Kelber S et al.

Pediatric Anesthesia, First published 12 February 2026

Summary

This national cross-sectional survey examined knowledge, attitudes, and practices regarding pediatric regional anesthesia (PRA) among South African anesthetists. Despite global growth in ultrasound-guided PRA and strong international safety data, uptake in low- and middle-income countries remains inconsistent.

The online survey was distributed to members of the South African Society of Anaesthesiologists (SASA) between April–May 2024.

Key methodology details:

  • 727 eligible anesthetists

  • 180 initiated (24.8% response rate)

  • 142 complete responses analyzed (78.9% completion rate)

  • Three domains assessed: demographics/practice, attitudes (8 Likert-scale statements), and knowledge (10 true–false questions)

  • Adequate knowledge defined pragmatically as ≥60% correct

Respondent profile:

  • 1/3 had over 15 years of experience

  • Just over 1/4 were trainees

  • Practice distributed across public, private, and mixed sectors

  • Formal pediatric anesthesia fellowships were uncommon

  • More than half had some regional anesthesia training, but training was heterogeneous

Practice patterns:

  • Fewer than 40% routinely or often performed PRA

  • Continuous catheter techniques were rarely used

  • Most clinicians believed they could perform PRA safely

  • Common complications reported: failed/abandoned blocks and vascular puncture

  • Some respondents reported altering practice after complications

Barriers and facilitators:

Primary barriers

  • Lack of experience

  • Insufficient training

  • Time pressure

  • Equipment constraints (especially pediatric-specific consumables)

  • Consent concerns

Facilitators

  • Surgeon support (most frequently cited)

  • Mentorship

  • Teamwork

Importantly, there was no significant difference in perceived equipment barriers between public and private sectors.

Attitudes:

  • Overall positive toward PRA

  • Strong agreement that PRA improves pediatric pain management

  • Belief that PRA is beneficial in LMIC settings

However:

  • Clinicians with longer duration of practice had less favorable attitudes

  • All trainees expressed willingness to perform more PRA if supported with adequate training and resources

Knowledge findings:

  • Fewer than 40% achieved adequate knowledge scores

  • Knowledge deficits were most pronounced among trainees and non-specialists

Limitations:

  • Opt-in design with modest response rate (risk of selection bias)

  • Knowledge benchmark not externally validated

  • Equipment variables not systematically categorized

Conclusions

PRA in South Africa remains underutilized despite generally favorable attitudes. The dominant barriers are educational and experiential rather than purely infrastructural.

The authors advocate:

  • Structured, competency-based training models

  • Standardized PRA curriculum development

  • Short-course, high-yield “Plan A block” models (e.g., axillary brachial plexus, femoral, popliteal sciatic, rectus sheath, quadratus lumborum, caudal, dorsal penile blocks)

  • Emphasis on mentorship and interdisciplinary collaboration

These findings represent the first national needs assessment of PRA in South Africa and highlight scalable strategies to improve pediatric perioperative care in resource-constrained systems.

What You Should Know

  1. PRA underuse is primarily a training issue. Experience and knowledge gaps—not just equipment—limit implementation.

  2. Trainees are highly receptive. There is strong willingness to expand PRA if structured support exists.

  3. Surgeon buy-in is critical. Multidisciplinary engagement may be a key lever for growth.

  4. Plan A block strategies may be practical in LMICs. Focused, high-yield blocks may provide the best return on training investment.

  5. This mirrors broader LMIC anesthesia trends. Generalist anesthetists need scalable, competency-based models rather than subspecialty-dependent systems.

Key Points

  • National survey of 142 South African anesthetists.

  • PRA is infrequently performed despite positive attitudes.

  • <40% met adequate knowledge threshold.

  • Major barriers: training, experience, time pressure.

  • Opportunities: structured training, mentorship, surgeon engagement.

Thank you to Pediatric Anesthesia for allowing us to summarize and share this important work aimed at strengthening pediatric regional anesthesia capacity in resource-limited settings.

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