GENERALSURGERYNEWS.COM
February 2013 • Volume 40 • Number 2
The Independent Monthly Newspaper for the General Surgeon
Opinion
Program Seeks To Optimize Outcomes by Targeting Risk Factors Before Surgery
Surgery Under the Affordable Care Act: Problems and Possible Solutions
B Y C HRISTINA F RANGOUU
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Chronic Pain Can Be Limited by Anesthesia Choice Breast Surgery, Thoracotomy Patientss Better Off at Six Months With Local, Regional Anesthesia
B Y H. D AVID R EINES , MD
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ow that the decision by the U.S. Supreme Court guarantees that the Affordable Care Act (ACA) is indeed the law of the land, it is time to stop ranting, especially in medical journals, and face reality. I don’t listen to Rush Limbaugh or Rachel Maddow, and I don’t believe that ranting helps anyone understand and deal with the problems we face in medicine. This opinion piece is my attempt to discuss a very complex problem with my peers in a manner that I hope will stimulate thoughtful discussion and understanding of an overwhelmingly complex problem. Last spring, the chief justice of the United States cast the deciding vote on what some have called “Obamacare” (even though the idea of a mandate was a Republican idea originating several years ago with the Heritage Foundation). The law stands despite a poor job of selling the program by the Obama see AFFORDABLE CARE page 33
PROCEDURAL BREAKTHROUGH Clinical Advances of the Endo GIA ATM TM Radial Reload With Tri-Staple Technology in Laparoscopic LAR see page 8
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urgeons in Washington sttate are targeting surgical compllications by focusing on someth hing often overlooked in quality initiatives: the things th hat patients can do to improove their outcomes in the weeeks and days before they come into the operating room. Surgeons in the state have launched a new program callled Strong for Surgery. The first largee-scale program to target the preoperative well-being of patients, it is designed to educate health care providers and patients about things patients can do to better prepare themselves for elective surgery. “Most things we’ve done too improve quality are based on the idea that it’s what we do oncce the patients get into the hospital see STRONG FOR SURGERY page 30
Enteral Contrast Not Beneficial for Suspected Appendicitis, Study Shows CHICAGO—Enteral contrast does not diagnostically benefit patients undergoing appendectomies, according to a study of a majority of patients in Washington state who had this procedure over a two-year period. As a result of their findings, researchers said that the addition of enteral contrast to IV contrast should
INSIDE EXTENDED HERNIA COVERAGE Pullout Section Page 11
On the Spot
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Roundtable topics: centers of excellence; component separation; fibrin glue for inguinal hernias
Surgeons’ Lounge
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The case of refractory strictures and ulcers after gastric bypass; Answers to two Surgeon’s Challenges
not be considered necessary when computed tomography (CT) is performed for suspected appendicitis. Physicians and hospitals participating in SCOAP (Surgical Care and Outcomes Assessment Program), the voluntary collaborative of surgeons in Washington that led the study, see ENTERAL CONTRAST PAGE 4
B Y D AMIAN M C N AMARA MIAMI BEACH—Administrattion of local or regional anesthesia before some major operations can prevent longterm pain for patients at five to six months postoperatively, according to a recent meta-analysis. “A large percentage of people have pain at six months, especially after thoracotomy, breast cancer surgery and cesarean section,” Michael H. Andreae, MD, said in an interview at the annual Fall Meeting of the American Society of Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine. Dr. Andreae and his associate, Doerthe A. Andreae, MD, identified 23 double-blind, randomized controlled trials in the literature that compared local or regional anesthesia see POSTOPERATIVE PAIN page 32
PROCEDURAL BREAKTHROUGH Surgical Repair Using Biologic Tissue Matrix To Facilitate Tissue Healing: A Case-Based Report see page 18