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Scope of practice of oculofacial plastic and reconstructive surgeons: a public perception survey

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DataCite Commons2024-09-16 更新2024-08-19 收录
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https://tandf.figshare.com/articles/dataset/Scope_of_practice_of_oculofacial_plastic_and_reconstructive_surgeons_a_public_perception_survey/25938714
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The purpose of this study is to determine the public’s perception of the scope of practice for oculofacial plastic and reconstructive surgeons (OFPRS). A 49-question survey was distributed by Qualtrics<sup>Ⓡ</sup> to a panel similar to the US demographic composition. Responses collected underwent bivariate statistical analysis. A total of 530 responses were obtained, with most respondents being white, female, over the age of 35, from the Midwest, and with at least a college education or above. Most respondents did not think ophthalmologists or optometrists were surgeons, and only 158 people (29.8%) knew the primary specialty of OFPRS was ophthalmology. Board certification was preferred by 98.87% of respondents, and 95.28% preferred ASOPRS-trained OFPRS. Our study highlights the gap in knowledge about OFPRS as a field, the qualifications and training required, and the scope of practice. Notably, even for OFPRS-specific procedures, PRS remained the leading subspecialist chosen for interventions such as orbital decompression (58.5% vs. 71.5%), orbital reconstruction (57.9% vs. 74.2%), enucleation/evisceration (48.1% vs. 53.4%), optic nerve-related surgery (39.8% vs. 43.4%), orbital cancer resection (42.8% vs. 46.8%), and tear duct surgery (41.9% vs. 52.5%). Additionally, most respondents did not feel that facial fillers, laser skin resurfacing, eyelid cancer removal, or cataract surgery were within the OFPRS scope of practice.
提供机构:
Taylor & Francis
创建时间:
2024-05-30
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