Guest guest Posted August 19, 2001 Report Share Posted August 19, 2001 > I therefore see NO reason why Dr. K's learning curve for the > lap DS would be any shorter than that of any other doctor. Except that Dr. K has the advantage of not being the FIRST lap DS surgeon. Almost all of the other lap DS surgeons have published reports on their learning curves and procedures. I am assuming that Dr. K is at least on speaking terms with these other surgeons and is aware of this. Therefore, he is aware of the mistakes and/or complications they had and the solutions they developed. This is not to say that he would not have a learning curve, only that he has the advantage of knowing what other surgeons went through. Presumably, he could therefore be proactive in avoiding some of the lap-related complications other surgeons experienced. - (not a Dr. K patient, if only for geographical reasons) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 19, 2001 Report Share Posted August 19, 2001 > I therefore see NO reason why Dr. K's learning curve for the > lap DS would be any shorter than that of any other doctor. Except that Dr. K has the advantage of not being the FIRST lap DS surgeon. Almost all of the other lap DS surgeons have published reports on their learning curves and procedures. I am assuming that Dr. K is at least on speaking terms with these other surgeons and is aware of this. Therefore, he is aware of the mistakes and/or complications they had and the solutions they developed. This is not to say that he would not have a learning curve, only that he has the advantage of knowing what other surgeons went through. Presumably, he could therefore be proactive in avoiding some of the lap-related complications other surgeons experienced. - (not a Dr. K patient, if only for geographical reasons) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 19, 2001 Report Share Posted August 19, 2001 Just some comments - ----- Original Message ----- > Bottom line: If you hop up on Dr. K's table for a lap DS right now, > you are volunteering for an experimental surgery by a surgeon who is > not experienced in performing it. What kind of experiment? > My advice, give him a hundred or so Lap DS's to work the kinks out > before signing up for it. > Tom Tom, who should he do these 100 lap DSs on? - SC Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 19, 2001 Report Share Posted August 19, 2001 Just some comments - ----- Original Message ----- > Bottom line: If you hop up on Dr. K's table for a lap DS right now, > you are volunteering for an experimental surgery by a surgeon who is > not experienced in performing it. What kind of experiment? > My advice, give him a hundred or so Lap DS's to work the kinks out > before signing up for it. > Tom Tom, who should he do these 100 lap DSs on? - SC Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 19, 2001 Report Share Posted August 19, 2001 Wow, Tom, when you're sure you're right, you're absolutely sure that you're right, no matter where the truth may lie. My comments, notwithstanding your solid stance, stand. Dr. K's background in lap surgery is significant in spite of your lame analogy to " training wheels " and the suggestion that all surgeons are lap surgeons. To continue your analogy from yesterday, when you learn with training wheels and you take them off when you are ready to go it alone and you can proceed solo just fine. If you get on a bike for the first time without having had the benefit of training wheels, you do as I did, crash into a rose bush - or whatever the closest obstacle might be. By the way, you made some comments about Delano Regional Medical Center that I should have responded to in greater detail. If you were to research fact, instead of dearly clinging to your opinion, you would find that Dr. Keshishian has at his disposal the newest and best of everything - from the operating room to the newly created wing for bariatric surgery patients. Is that really available at USC? Let's not let this degenerate into further " My Daddy is bigger than your Daddy " exchanges. Best- Nick in Sage Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 19, 2001 Report Share Posted August 19, 2001 Wow, Tom, when you're sure you're right, you're absolutely sure that you're right, no matter where the truth may lie. My comments, notwithstanding your solid stance, stand. Dr. K's background in lap surgery is significant in spite of your lame analogy to " training wheels " and the suggestion that all surgeons are lap surgeons. To continue your analogy from yesterday, when you learn with training wheels and you take them off when you are ready to go it alone and you can proceed solo just fine. If you get on a bike for the first time without having had the benefit of training wheels, you do as I did, crash into a rose bush - or whatever the closest obstacle might be. By the way, you made some comments about Delano Regional Medical Center that I should have responded to in greater detail. If you were to research fact, instead of dearly clinging to your opinion, you would find that Dr. Keshishian has at his disposal the newest and best of everything - from the operating room to the newly created wing for bariatric surgery patients. Is that really available at USC? Let's not let this degenerate into further " My Daddy is bigger than your Daddy " exchanges. Best- Nick in Sage Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 19, 2001 Report Share Posted August 19, 2001 > > My advice, give him a hundred or so > > Lap DS's to work the kinks out > > before signing up for it. > > Tom, who should he do these 100 lap DSs on? Not me or any of my loved ones, that's for sure! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 19, 2001 Report Share Posted August 19, 2001 > > My advice, give him a hundred or so > > Lap DS's to work the kinks out > > before signing up for it. > > Tom, who should he do these 100 lap DSs on? Not me or any of my loved ones, that's for sure! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 20, 2001 Report Share Posted August 20, 2001 Hi Nick: > Wow, Tom, when you're sure you're right, you're > absolutely sure that you're right, no matter > where the truth may lie. Something we have in common, me thinks... > > Dr. K's background in lap surgery is significant > in spite of your lame analogy to " training wheels " Okay, so my analogy was lame. I'll try a different one -- student pilots. Advanced student pilots learn to fly in a somewhat similar fashion to how advanced student surgeons, (residents with the requisite experience watching operations and practicing on cadevers, or whatever they use these days), learn to operate. The student pilot flys the plane, but the instructor pilot is always right there, ready to take over if anything goes wrong with the flight. Similarly, the resident performs the surgery, but the professor is right there to take over in case anything goes wrong with the surgery. Going back once again to our soon-to-be pilot... No matter how many flights s/he makes with the instructor, they are still student flights. The pressure just isn't the same. Sure, if the student pilot messes up badly, he may get tossed from the program and never become a pilot, and we can all safely assume that the student pilot would avoid this if his/her skills allow her/him to do so. But the pressure gets worse when the instructor pilot is no longer there and the student must fly " solo " -- now there is no one to keep the Grim Reaper from taking the controls except for our newbie pilot. Similarly, once the surgeon finishes her/his residency, there is no longer a wise professor in the room to help keep the Grim Reaper from taking the patient. The pressure is now higher, and it is all on the new surgeon. This is real, without a net, surgery. And this is why I don't count surgeries performed during residency when figuring a surgeon's experience. > and the suggestion that all surgeons are lap surgeons. I didn't suggest that all surgeons are lap surgeons any more than all dancers are lap dancers. You implied that Dr. K has more experience with lap surgery than most other surgeons who have recently completed residency. I quoted from the standards of the American Board of Surgery, (the certifying body for surgeons in the United States), to the effect that ALL surgeons MUST be trained in laparoscopic surgery in order to become " Board Certified " as general surgeons. If you have some evidence to show that during his residency Dr. K performed say, 2X laparoscopic procedures while most other surgeons perform only X laproscopic procedures during their residencies, then please, enlighten me. (I would still consider them " practice " surgeries, for the reasons stated above, but at least I'd know that Dr. K had indeed performed more such practice procedures than average.) > Let's not let this degenerate into further " My Daddy is bigger than > your Daddy " exchanges. I really don't see what my dad has to do with this. (He's only 5'5 " tall, by the way, and his is the THIN side of the family.) For the record, Dr. Anthone, (who is NOT my father, but who isn't a great deal taller than my father), has performed more than 500 DS surgeries, (without an instructor pilot). In addition, I estimate that he has probably performed something on the order of 1,600 to 3,000 total surgical procedures since he finished his residency and the two-year surgical fellowship that followed. (That's 4-6 procedures per week, 40-50 weeks per year, since 1991.) He also TEACHES laparoscopic surgery to residents in his capacity as a professor of surgery. But, if Dr. Anthone were to begin performing the DS laparoscopically, I would advise folks to wait until he had performed a hundred or so before signing up for one, just to let him work the kinks out. It has nothing to do with who has the meaner dad or the longer ... um ... probe. It's simply a matter of being prudent in a matter of life and death. Cheers, Tom Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 20, 2001 Report Share Posted August 20, 2001 At the risk of getting caught in the crossfire...j/k, I'd like to say I chose Dr K for the following reasons: How he values me as a patient, my research, my time frame and my wallet. Dr's A, R and K are all competent surgeons, I don't think that's been the point of the debate, if I've read the lines and between the lines correctly. Which one would get chosen if all things were equal? Personally, for me, it would have been Dr. Rabkin, since he is closer to my home, I have a personal reference and he's a world renowned surgeon (I've heard). The fact of the matter is, he didn't seem to want to be MY surgeon. I'm not sure how else to take the fact that it took me a month with working (very patiently) with his office to get my insurance ALMOST checked. I felt like he could be the best surgeon in the galaxy this side of Bones McCoy, but if he didn't value my business (for whatever the reason), I needed to take my business elsewhere. I also felt that his request for upfront fees was telling me that he preferred to work with self pay patients. No problem, I understood. Then, I turned to Dr. K, who was much closer than Anthone, and within my budget for the aftercare. My insurance is covering all but $100, so the aftercare and hotel prices were all that I had to be concerned with. I didn't try Anthone, because I assumed (possibly erroneously) that he would have much the same backlog as Dr R. Dr. K is young, yes. He is, relative to the others, inexperienced. He is just starting lap procedures. Would I want to be the first batch? Nope. Would I be his 20th? Probably. Would I be his 50th? Absolutely. The point for ME was clear. I would prefer open now, to lap later. I feel that being MO is damaging my health more by the hour. I don't want to wait while someone " fits me in " to their schedule, because they are so inundated with patients that their staff can't even return a phone call. Delano is, pretty much, the middle of nowhere. What an ingenious idea for a surgeon just starting out to place his shingle where there isn't such a high overhead, and is a little more remote. Someone said earlier, if you build it, they will come. As you can see from the number of posts regarding him, the number of patients seeking his care is only increasing. I believe that a lot of that has to do with his accessability, but it also has to do with his successability (my own word). It is also due to his concern and openness to the patient and the process. I watched him, during a seminar, get beat down about the charges for self pays (even though his fees are less than either R or A), and he handled it all with aplomb. He is interested in his patients, and in their histories. He did not leave a stone unturned with me, and I see that as competence. That's all I want, a competent Dr. He doesn't have to be Barry Bonds, what I want is Will or Tony Gwynn. (No, not literally, silly!) I'm sure the superstars are the only way to go for a lot of people, but not for me. (My prediction...Dr K a superstar within 2 years!) I know from experience that it is hard to run a medical office when business is booming. I also know from being in the customer service field that the chances of you getting better care AFTER your first " purchase " are less if the care you received before your " purchase " was less than satisfactory. The truth (manifesto, sorry)according to (beautiful butterfly in waiting) Dr. K 8/24/01 THIS FRIDAY!!!!!! > > Hi Nick: > > > Wow, Tom, when you're sure you're right, you're > > absolutely sure that you're right, no matter > > where the truth may lie. > > Something we have in common, me thinks... > > > > > Dr. K's background in lap surgery is significant > > in spite of your lame analogy to " training wheels " > > Okay, so my analogy was lame. I'll try a different one -- student > pilots. Advanced student pilots learn to fly in a somewhat similar > fashion to how advanced student surgeons, (residents with the > requisite experience watching operations and practicing on cadevers, > or whatever they use these days), learn to operate. > > The student pilot flys the plane, but the instructor pilot is always > right there, ready to take over if anything goes wrong with the > flight. Similarly, the resident performs the surgery, but the > professor is right there to take over in case anything goes wrong > with the surgery. > > Going back once again to our soon-to-be pilot... No matter how many > flights s/he makes with the instructor, they are still student > flights. The pressure just isn't the same. Sure, if the student > pilot messes up badly, he may get tossed from the program and never > become a pilot, and we can all safely assume that the student pilot > would avoid this if his/her skills allow her/him to do so. > > But the pressure gets worse when the instructor pilot is no longer > there and the student must fly " solo " -- now there is no one to keep > the Grim Reaper from taking the controls except for our newbie > pilot. Similarly, once the surgeon finishes her/his residency, there > is no longer a wise professor in the room to help keep the Grim > Reaper from taking the patient. > > The pressure is now higher, and it is all on the new surgeon. This > is real, without a net, surgery. And this is why I don't count > surgeries performed during residency when figuring a surgeon's > experience. > > > > and the suggestion that all surgeons are lap surgeons. > > I didn't suggest that all surgeons are lap surgeons any more than all > dancers are lap dancers. You implied that Dr. K has more experience > with lap surgery than most other surgeons who have recently completed > residency. I quoted from the standards of the American Board of > Surgery, (the certifying body for surgeons in the United States), to > the effect that ALL surgeons MUST be trained in laparoscopic surgery > in order to become " Board Certified " as general surgeons. > > If you have some evidence to show that during his residency Dr. K > performed say, 2X laparoscopic procedures while most other surgeons > perform only X laproscopic procedures during their residencies, then > please, enlighten me. (I would still consider them " practice " > surgeries, for the reasons stated above, but at least I'd know that > Dr. K had indeed performed more such practice procedures than > average.) > > > > Let's not let this degenerate into further " My Daddy is bigger than > > your Daddy " exchanges. > > I really don't see what my dad has to do with this. (He's only 5'5 " > tall, by the way, and his is the THIN side of the family.) > > For the record, Dr. Anthone, (who is NOT my father, but who isn't a > great deal taller than my father), has performed more than 500 DS > surgeries, (without an instructor pilot). In addition, I estimate > that he has probably performed something on the order of 1,600 to > 3,000 total surgical procedures since he finished his residency and > the two-year surgical fellowship that followed. (That's 4-6 > procedures per week, 40-50 weeks per year, since 1991.) He also > TEACHES laparoscopic surgery to residents in his capacity as a > professor of surgery. > > But, if Dr. Anthone were to begin performing the DS laparoscopically, > I would advise folks to wait until he had performed a hundred or so > before signing up for one, just to let him work the kinks out. It > has nothing to do with who has the meaner dad or the longer ... > um ... probe. It's simply a matter of being prudent in a matter of > life and death. > > Cheers, > > Tom Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 20, 2001 Report Share Posted August 20, 2001 What the patient risks in having a surgeon with a limited number of laps under his/her belt is a higher risk of complications. It's a risk, not a guarantee. And with adequate experience the risks are equal to that of the open. I passed up an open in November last year because I wanted the lap. When the lap option was lost and my insurance was running out I had the open. No regrets. However, I am researching lap options for my significant other. What I don't know is the nature and severity of the increased complications during the learning curve of 70 procedures. Maybe that information is buried in the stack of articles and abstracts that I have been slowly sorting through. I think the notion of avoiding a surgeon until they have 100 laps is hugely excessive. in Seattle > Bottom line: If you hop up on Dr. K's table for a lap DS right now, > you are volunteering for an experimental surgery by a surgeon who is > not experienced in performing it. > > My advice, give him a hundred or so Lap DS's to work the kinks out > before signing up for it. > > Tom Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 20, 2001 Report Share Posted August 20, 2001 And your scars are so cute, to boot! > > I think the notion of avoiding a surgeon until they have 100 laps is > > hugely excessive. > > I was Dr. Rabkin's 2nd fully lap DS patient. I had great confidence in > his lap skills though; his extensive lap experience dated back several > decades, being a pioneer of the lap cholecystectomy in California. When > I had my initial consult and got my surgery date, I thought I would be > getting open DS, and was fine with that! As luck would have it though, > he adopted the LapDS during my wait, and I was one of the first of his > patients to get it. No regrets here! > > M. > > --- > in Valrico, FL, age 39 > Starting weight 299, now 156 > Starting BMI 49.7, now 26.0 > Lap DGB/DS by Dr. Rabkin 10-19-99 > http://www.duodenalswitch.com > > Direct replies: mailto:melanie@t... > > > __________________________________________________ _______ > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 20, 2001 Report Share Posted August 20, 2001 I am not a doctor and I don't play one on TV, but it seems to me that the worse case during a lap procedure would be 'Oopsie - guess we gotta go open', and you wake up with a longer incision than expected. Just a thought. Greg Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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