| Literature DB >> 32309331 |
Elise Lupon1,2, Arthur Bedet3, Paul Girard4, Jerome Laloze5, Jean L Grolleau1, Laurent Lantieri6, Alexandre G Lellouch2,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Plastic surgery is a transversal discipline that many people misunderstand, including general practitioners, medical students, paramedics and the public. Plastic surgeons often collaborate with physiotherapists for post-acute care and rehabilitation. They ensure optimal post-operative recovery of the patient. Herein, the authors assessed the medical knowledge and perceptions of plastic surgery by physiotherapists working outside health centers and explored their attitudes towards classic reconstructive surgery scenarios.Entities:
Keywords: Physiotherapists; perception; plastic surgery; rehabilitation; surgical physiotherapy
Year: 2020 PMID: 32309331 PMCID: PMC7154485 DOI: 10.21037/atm.2020.01.109
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Transl Med ISSN: 2305-5839
Summary table (physiotherapist characteristic enrolled in this study)
| Physiotherapist characteristic | Result |
|---|---|
| Average age | 31.4 years |
| Gender | 68.7% female |
| Years of professional experience in private practice | 9.4 years |
| Lack of knowledge in plastic surgery | 37.7% |
| Extracurriculars knowledge in plastic surgery specialty | >60% (including 15% media) |
| Uninformed about the hand surgery activity performed by plastic surgeon | 83.1% |
| Uninformed about the microsurgery performed by plastic surgeon | 71.1% |
| Uninformed about the craniofacial surgery activity performed by plastic surgeon | 40.3% |
| Ignorance or vague notion of the flap surgery | 54% |
| Care management of plastic surgery patients | 74.6% |
| Uncomfortable with the management of a patient post conventional reconstruction surgery | 41.9% |
| Need to contact a surgeon to learn about the rehabilitation instructions | 80.8% |
| Avoidance of providing a physical therapy session by fear of making a mistake | 57.6% |
| Insufficient prerequisites during their training to properly manage plastic surgery patients | 70.4% |
| Usefulness of having more information on plastic surgery during their training | 96.2% |
Figure 1Main source of knowledge of plastic surgery by the paramedics interviewed.
Figure 2Activities associated with plastic surgery reported by the paramedics interviewed.
Figure 3Avoidance of a treatment for fear of making a mistake.