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Journal Article

Citation

Jang B, Bhavsar DR. Eplasty 2019; 19: e6.

Affiliation

University of Kansas School of Medicine, Kansas City, KS.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Open Science)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

30949279

Abstract

Purpose: Psychiatric disorder is one of the predictors of poor outcome in cosmetic plastic surgery patients. A US study in 1960 showed that 72.4% of 98 cosmetic plastic surgery patients had a psychiatric disorder. In our study, we predict that the prevalence of psychiatric disorders will be statistically significant among patients seeking elective plastic surgery in comparison with the general US population. Methods: We conducted a retrospective review study of 1000 adult patients seeking elective plastic surgery at The University of Kansas Medical Center Plastic Surgery Department from 2011 to 2016. Results: From 1000 patients seeking elective plastic surgery procedure, 441 (44.1%) patients have or had a history of psychiatric disorder. Most common psychiatric disorders were major depressive disorder (n = 223; 50.6%) and generalized anxiety disorder (n = 145; 32.9%). Conclusion: Our study indicates that psychiatric disorders are prevalent in patients seeking elective plastic surgery at our institution. Anxiety and depression were the most common diagnoses, and this is possibly due to these being the most common psychiatric disorders in the US population.

RESULTS highlight the importance of provider vigilance for psychiatric patients seeking elective plastic surgery.


Language: en

Keywords

anxiety; cosmetic surgery; depression; plastic surgery; psychiatric

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