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Journal Article

Citation

Koenig WJ, Lewis VL. Plast. Reconstr. Surg. 1993; 91(5): 778-782.

Affiliation

Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Northwestern University.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1993, Lippincott Williams and Wilkins)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

8460179

Abstract

Treatment of maxillofacial trauma patients can be difficult for the surgeon because of patient noncompliance, frequent litigation, and poor payment habits. Numerous studies have examined the socioeconomic aspects of trauma as they affect hospitals and communities, but none to date has looked at the socioeconomic aspects of trauma as they affect the surgeon. This study is based on a retrospective sequential review of the medical records of 50 patients who suffered malar complex fractures and were treated with operative reduction at a university medical center. These patients are compared with a sequential series of 20 patients with basal cell carcinoma of the cheek treated by the same surgeon. The maxillofacial trauma group paid an average of 57 percent of their bills and had cases that involved lawyers 30 percent of the time, and only 54 percent of the patients kept all their postoperative appointments. All these figures were statistically different from those of the basal cell carcinoma patients, who paid an average of 90 percent of their bills and had no cases that involved lawyers and 95 percent of whom kept all postoperative appointments. These findings support the premise that maxillofacial trauma patients are difficult patients to treat and that unless the trauma reimbursement system is revised, plastic surgeons may limit their treatment of trauma in the future.


Language: en

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