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Why Select a Board-Certified Plastic Surgeon?
Source: The American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery (ASAPS)
- Plastic surgeons are trained to perform surgery. It may sound obvious, but many people don't realize that only some of the 24
medical specialties recognized by The American Board of Medical Specialties include surgical training. Plastic surgery is a
surgical specialty.
- Plastic surgeons are experts in both facial and body procedures. Board-certified plastic surgeons complete a minimum of five
years of surgical training following medical school, including a plastic surgery residency program. In-depth training
encompasses surgical procedures of the face and the entire body.
- Plastic surgeons are trained to prevent and, if necessary, handle emergencies. A comprehensive education, including a sound
foundation in anatomy and physiology, provides plastic surgeons with an understanding of all body systems-including ventilation,
circulation, fluid and electrolyte balance-which is vitally important to patient safety.
- Plastic surgeons' training develops technical skill and aesthetic judgment. Experience gained during years of training in
complex reconstructive surgery provides plastic surgeons with outstanding technical skills. Additionally, however, the
continuous attention to form as well as function provides these specialists with a finely tuned sense of aesthetics-a unique
qualification that is critical to the success of cosmetic surgery where judgments of balance and proportion are called upon.
- Plastic surgeons have access to a wide range of potential treatments. Of all the different medical specialists, plastic surgeons
have the training to offer their patients the entire scope of cosmetic treatment modalities. Their recommendations are not
limited by lack of training or inability to obtain hospital privileges to perform complex procedures when necessary.
Because state laws permit any licensed physician to call him - or herself a "plastic" or "cosmetic" surgeon - even if he or she has
not been trained as a plastic surgeon or has had no surgical training at all - prospective patients must select their doctor
carefully.
For more information on Patient Safety visit www.surgery.org/public/safety.
Training and Certification of Plastic Surgeons
Source: The American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery (ASAPS)
Often portrayed as a "turf battle," the issue of training and credentials in plastic surgery is actually an issue of public safety
about which responsible doctors are necessarily concerned. Would you want your plastic surgery performed by someone who has never
had any formal surgical training? It can easily happen ...
- There are many physicians today practicing plastic surgery who have received their formal training in another specialty --
often a non-surgical specialty. These doctors may call themselves plastic surgeons, but they may not be trained in plastic
surgery.
- Some physicians without plastic surgery training, as well as trained and qualified plastic surgeons, perform cosmetic surgery
in their offices. The difference is that a board-certified plastic surgeon will also have privileges to perform these
procedures at an accredited hospital.
- When we talk about a "board-certified plastic surgeon," we mean one who is certified by the American Board of Plastic Surgery
(ABPS), the only board recognized by the American Board of Medical Specialties (ABMS) to certify physicians in the full range
of plastic and reconstructive procedures. To be certified by the ABPS, a physician must have at least five years of approved
surgical training, including a residency in plastic surgery. He or she must also pass a comprehensive written and oral exams
in plastic surgery.
- Many physicians who call themselves "facial plastic surgeons" are trained in otolaryngology, a surgical specialty which
includes training in plastic surgery of the head and neck. Physicians who call themselves "cosmetic surgeons" could be trained in
any specialty, including a non-surgical specialty, because anyone who has a medical license can legally call him/herself a
surgeon even if they have no formal surgical training.
- Membership in the American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery is by invitation only and is limited to ABPS-certified
surgeons who demonstrate wide experience in the major aesthetic surgical procedures.
For more information on Patient Safety visit www.surgery.org/public/safety. |