Beware of Untrained “Plastic Surgeons”
The rise of medspas and a recent liposuction death in Florida in a young 37 year old nurse bring to light several issues our specialty is confronted with. Read the news story here.
Liposuction performed by untrained and non-certified doctors and paraprofessionals can lead to detrimental and possibly even fatal outcomes that can be prevented. This case illustrates that point, as a doctor who had only gone to an 18-hour training course in liposuction and was actually an occupational medicine physician performed the procedure on the Floridian woman. The procedure was performed in an unlicensed and non-accredited facility labeled “Tanning Salon” on the outside. Reports show that she likely had seizures from a lidocaine overdose, and she was also given Propofol in the medspa/tanning salon, which is against state law. Propofol is a powerful intravenous sedative and anesthetic agent (the one that killed Michael Jackson), and lidocaine is a local anesthetic that is injected into the subcutaneous fat, often mixed with saline to dilute it, prior to liposuction to cut down on bleeding and for pain control. The dose for a particular human body weight has to be specifically calculated so that overdose and fatality doesn’t ensue no matter what type of case is being performed. It is concerning because an occupational medicine doctor would likely have no specialty training in this particular facet of surgery.
A lack of oversight of medspa facilities has played a part in this young woman’s death after liposuction, as facilities that are not licensed or accredited by state and federal organizations such as JCAHO for hospitals and AAAASF for offices and small facilities should not be able to have practitioners of any kind administering powerful drugs such as Propofol and administering injections of lidocaine. Because this facility had no business performing these procedures, they had no back up emergency crash cart with medications in it to help resuscitate a person who may have complications from these types of drugs and surgeries.
Our state and federal governments are missing the ball in their lack of regulation of physicians, paramedical professionals and technicians performing cosmetic procedures and surgery without proper certification and credentialing. Patient safety is a major issue especially with physicians practicing outside of the scope of their training. Plastic surgery should be done by board-certified plastic surgeons, delivering babies by obstetricians, and workplace injury evaluations by occupational medicine doctors. Surgical training takes many years and requires a vigorous board certification and continuing education process. Israel has laws in place that enforce physicians to practice within their scope of training and advertise in keeping with their training and board certification; the US government should take cues from them.
Prospective patients also need to wise up and educate themselves by doing research on their treating physician. The discount that people get for untrained professionals to do their surgery or procedure is quickly offset by the complications that can be extremely costly, even to their life. Things to look in a plastic surgeon are for are board certification by the American Board of Plastic Surgery, experience with the procedure being performed, and hospital privileges at a local tertiary care center should complications arise that need to be expeditiously treated.
Tags: AAAASF, american board of plastic surgery, dr jennifer walden, fox and friends, gretchen carlson, JCAHO, liposuction





March 12th, 2010 at 5:25 am
[...] Beware of Untrained “Plastic Surgeons” [...]
March 12th, 2010 at 9:53 am
This post helped me a lot!
May 14th, 2010 at 4:36 am
Good post, thanks
May 14th, 2010 at 4:36 am
Wonderful to read!
May 19th, 2010 at 2:09 am
I really appreciate what you post here, very insightful and intelligent. One problem though, I’m running Firefox on Ubuntu and parts of your layout pieces are a little misaligned. I realize it’s not a common setup, but it is still something to keep an eye on. Just tossing you a heads up.
May 20th, 2010 at 11:31 pm
hey,Great blogging dude! i am just Tired of using RSS feeds and do you use twitter?so i can follow you there:D.
PS:Do you considered putting video to your web site to keep the readers more entertained?I think it works.Yours, Charlyn Vandercook
May 29th, 2010 at 12:49 pm
It sounds like you’re creating problems yourself by trying to solve this issue instead of looking at why their is a problem in the first place
May 29th, 2010 at 5:12 pm
Great info, thanks for useful article. I am waiting for more
May 30th, 2010 at 11:11 pm
I thought it was going to be some boring old post, but it really compensated for my time. I will post a link to this page on my blog. I am sure my visitors will find that very useful
June 2nd, 2010 at 5:42 pm
I have to say, you chose your words well. The ideas you wrote on your encounters are well placed. This is an incredible blog!
June 3rd, 2010 at 7:19 pm
O widze masz podobne zainteresowania do moich, fajna strona, zajrze tu niedlugo
June 4th, 2010 at 1:03 pm
Hi, I do not usually put up comments on blogs, as I wish to learn only. But I discover the article that you have written earlier has very insightful information, and I discover it very informational. Anyway, I am questioning whether you might be open for hyperlink change, as I hope that we are able to agree on a mutual hyperlink change agreement. Hope to listen to a constructive reply from you, and have an important day!
June 4th, 2010 at 3:53 pm
Your article is written well, it is worth learning, I have tagged your blog.
June 5th, 2010 at 8:19 am
of links every day from twitter clone sites.