Need Surgery? Make Sure Your Surgeon is a Specialist

It's not about how many times one does it.

YouTube: I spend a fair amount of time talking about how social determinants of health come into play, with respect to health care outcomes. I also talk a lot about things that don't work, and therefore constitute waste in that they don't affect outcomes positively, and cost money. But there are some aspects of health care (many, in fact) that do matter, and when research points that out, it's worth highlighting.
siftbotsays...

Promoting this video and sending it back into the queue for one more try; last queued Friday, September 2nd, 2016 11:34pm PDT - promote requested by eric3579.

articiansays...

This guy always sounds like the last of his patience (that's patience, not patients), has just been sucked out of him by some common plebes, and he barely has the time to bother with making the stupid video for the rest of the common masses.

Nephelimdreamjokingly says...

Eat a shit, commie.

articiansaid:

This guy always sounds like the last of his patience (that's patience, not patients), has just been sucked out of him by some common plebes, and he barely has the time to bother with making the stupid video for the rest of the common masses.

ChaosEnginesays...

Yep. Seems like a reasonable position.

articiansaid:

This guy always sounds like the last of his patience (that's patience, not patients), has just been sucked out of him by some common plebes, and he barely has the time to bother with making the stupid video for the rest of the common masses.

poolcleanersays...

You always sound like an asshole

articiansaid:

This guy always sounds like the last of his patience (that's patience, not patients), has just been sucked out of him by some common plebes, and he barely has the time to bother with making the stupid video for the rest of the common masses.

nocksays...

Depends on the surgery. You don't need a specialist to do your acute appendectomy or cholecystectomy, but you DO need a specialist to do your knee replacement or ICA aneurysm clipping.

Also, I assume the risk reductions presented are relative - e.g. if mortality from a non-specialist surgeon procedure is 5% and a specialist surgeon mortality has a 4% risk, the relative risk reduction is 20% (absolute risk reduction is only 1%), which sounds really high and may be statistically significant, but in the real-world does not matter all that much. This would be called statistically significant, but likely not clinically significant.

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