Midlevel Injectable Practice Patterns in Dermatology and Plastic Surgery Offices.

Dermatologic surgery : official publication for American Society for Dermatologic Surgery [et al.] 2021 Vol.47(5) p. 645-648

Nesi L, Belcher M, Decker A, Lawrence N

Abstract

[BACKGROUND] There is limited knowledge on the extent physicians delegate cosmetic procedures to midlevel providers.

[OBJECTIVE] To assess dermatology and plastic surgery practice patterns for the injections of neurotoxins and dermal fillers.

[MATERIALS AND METHODS] Four hundred ninety-two dermatology and plastic surgery practices were identified from 10 major US metropolitan areas. These practices were contacted, and staff were asked a series of questions to best characterize the practice patterns in regard to who performs the injectables in the office.

[RESULTS] Although most dermatology and plastic surgery practices had physicians as the only provider who gives injectables, 18.35% of dermatology and 25.4% of plastic surgery practices had nurse practioners and physician assistants giving injectables both with and without oversight of the supervising physician onsite.

[CONCLUSION] In a large majority of both plastic surgery and dermatology practices, physicians exclusively perform injections of neurotoxins and fillers. For practices that allow midlevel providers to perform injectables, the level of physician supervision is variable. In a small percentage of plastic surgery practices, surveyed midlevel providers exclusively performed injectables.

추출된 의학 개체 (NER)

유형영어 표현한국어 / 풀이UMLS CUI출처등장
합병증 dermal scispacy 1
약물 [BACKGROUND] scispacy 1
약물 [OBJECTIVE] scispacy 1
기타 physician scispacy 1

MeSH Terms

Adult; Clinical Competence; Cosmetic Techniques; Delegation, Professional; Dermal Fillers; Dermatology; Female; Humans; Injections; Male; Neurotoxins; Nurse Practitioners; Physician Assistants; Surgery, Plastic; Surveys and Questionnaires; United States