Attitudes, Beliefs, and Practices of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons Regarding Informed Consent.

Aesthetic surgery journal 2020 Vol.40(4) p. 437-447

Hagopian CO, Ades TB, Hagopian TM, Wolfswinkel EM, Stevens WG

Abstract

[BACKGROUND] Best practice for informed consent in aesthetic plastic surgery is a process of shared decision-making, yet evidence strongly suggests this is not commonly reflected in practice nor is it supported by traditional informed consent documents (ICD). Falsely held beliefs by clinicians about shared decision-making may contribute to its lack of adoption.

[OBJECTIVE] The authors sought to understand the baseline attitudes, beliefs, and practices of informed consent among board-certified plastic surgeons with a primarily aesthetics practice.

[METHODS] A 15-question online survey was emailed to active members of the American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery. Items included demographics, Likert scales, free-text, acceptability, and 1 question seeking consensus on general information all patients must understand before any surgery.

[RESULTS] This survey yielded a 13% response rate with a 52% completion rate across 10 countries and 31 US states. A total of 69% were very or extremely confident that ICD contain evidence-based information, but 63% were not at all or not so confident in ICD effectiveness of prompting patients to teach-back essential information. A total of 50% believed surgical ICD should be reviewed annually. Eighty-six percent reported assistance with patient education during informed consent. Members of professional plastic surgery societies should be a source of evidence for content (free-text). A total of 64% were somewhat to very satisfied with the survey and 84% will probably to definitely participate in future related surveys.

[CONCLUSIONS] The findings echo concerns in the literature that ICD are focused on disclosure instead of patient understanding. There is notable concern regarding information overload and retention but less regarding the quality and completeness of information. Current culture suggests key clinician stakeholders are amenable to change.

추출된 의학 개체 (NER)

유형영어 표현한국어 / 풀이UMLS CUI출처등장
약물 [BACKGROUND] scispacy 1
약물 [OBJECTIVE] scispacy 1
약물 [CONCLUSIONS] scispacy 1
질환 overload and retention scispacy 1
기타 patients scispacy 1
기타 patient scispacy 1

MeSH Terms

Attitude; Esthetics; Humans; Informed Consent; Surgeons; Surgery, Plastic; United States