Quantitative Analysis of Aesthetic Results: Introducing a New Paradigm

2012 
When perusing a plastic surgery journal or attending a plastic surgery meeting, it is evident that the results shown in any given aesthetic presentation are considered by some to be excellent, whereas others deem the same results to be average or less than optimal. This disparity occurs when the interpretation of posttreatment results is based solely on subjective opinion. Certainly, the task of quantifying the results of aesthetic surgery (rather than just subjectively assessing their quality) is immense, but it is essential for aesthetic surgery to follow the trend toward evidenced-based medicine (EBM) that is becoming ingrained in the fabric of the medical profession as a whole. In fact, the quantification of aesthetic surgery results has more far-reaching ramifications than simply determining objective measures by which results can be judged. Objectively assessing the results of our cosmetic surgeries has the potential to change the way surgery is performed. As we all learn more about the philosophies behind EBM (eg, in the Editorial1 by Dr. Felmont Eaves and Dr. Andrea Pusic in this month’s issue, on page 117), it is helpful to also find support among colleagues who have begun implementing it in their own practices. To that end, we would like to share with you the ways in which adding quantitative outcomes assessment, which is the cornerstone of EBM, has changed some of our own clinical approaches. Rigorous research has been conducted and published on how to quantify (instead of merely qualify) patient satisfaction outcomes.2-4 However, as Millard5 taught us, patient satisfaction or dissatisfaction with surgical results should never dissuade us from critically evaluating the results themselves objectively. Thus, it is necessary for us, as plastic surgeons, to adopt a two-pronged approach to the critical evaluation of our surgical results: we must understand our patients’ …
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