|
Some will argue that a surgeon who has done 4,000 is tons better than a surgeon who has done 100. I would argue that may not be true.
I spoke with Don Mills at Allergan (the makers of the LAP-BAND®) and he told me that in order to be a proctor (teacher of others to place the band) for the LAP-BAND®, a surgeon must have placed...........100 bands!
Yep, Allergan considers a surgeon who has placed 100 bands to be an "expert" in their eyes.
I would say the surgeon you found sounds perfectly qualified. I would also ask him how many complications he has run into and what he has done about them. How many infections he has had and how many removals he has done (hopefully none to both, unless he is a surgeon who advertises for folks who WANT the band out, to come to him for removal).
You also have to feel comfortable with his responses and he should not be hesitant to answer these questions. After all, you are hiring him to do work on your most valuable asset, your body.
Check out what other patients think of him by looking over on obesityhelp.com for his profile.
Good Luck!
The surgeon I will likely end up having has only put in 30-50, but I am perfectly comfortable with his answers to my very pointed questions and the group he is in has among the lowest mortality rates in the country. I realize that 30-50 is a relatively low number, but I don't know that I'd be more comfortable having someone who has put in 4,000. I'd be wondering if I was being treated like a part on an assembly line and I would personally have to wonder if it becomes so repetitious to them after that many that they slack off sometimes (I'm sure that's not true, but *I* would think that).
__________________ Quando Omni Flunkus Moritati (When all else fails, play dead) H371/S327/C297 Fell off the wagon in a big way, got back on with my first fill ever 4/29/08 Small AP June 21st, 2007 by Dr. James Wagner @ Hurley in Flint, MI |