Plastic surgery videos need strict ethics standards, doctors argue
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[October 04, 2017] By
Lisa Rapaport
(Reuters Health) - Some plastic surgeons
have gained large social media followings by sharing theatrical videos
of surgery with entertainment, rather than education, in mind. Now
experts are proposing ethics guidelines to ensure that the content of
plastic surgery videos on social media isn’t harmful to patients.
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Too often, plastic surgery videos cross an ethical line, exploiting
patients and luring future customers with flashy before-and-after
images that gloss over the dangers of surgery, doctors argue in the
proposed ethics guidelines published in the journal Plastic and
Reconstructive Surgery.
To refocus videos on education and prevent exploitation, the
guidelines stress that patients should be asked to consent to
filming in advance and be allowed to refuse the request. Because
online videos might be manipulated and widely shared, patients
should also understand that their image might be used for something
their doctor didn’t sanction and that content is difficult to remove
online once it’s posted.
“Plastic surgery is uniquely drawn to social media because we tend
to do more marketing and we are a visual specialty,” said Dr. Clark
Schierle, senior author of the guidelines and a plastic surgeon at
Northwestern University's Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago.
“In general, there should be an effort to avoid distractions from
the actual surgery itself and sharing any content that makes the
patient identifiable without specific consent,” Schierle said by
email.
Many plastic surgeons question the ethics of broadcasts done more
for entertainment and marketing than for education, the authors
said, and have called for the development of more structured
oversight and guidance in this area.
The guidelines - the first to address sharing videos of plastic
surgery on social media - will be presented October 6 at the
American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS) annual meeting in
Orlando.
“We hope this will make its way into the official ethical code of
conduct for board-certified plastic surgeons,” Schierle said.
Plastic surgeons, like others in the medical profession, should
adhere to ethical standards that prioritize decisions that will not
harm patients, the guidelines argue.
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Even when patients agree to be filmed and have videos shared online,
doctors still have an obligation to protect patients’ privacy and
portray them in a respectful manner, the guidelines stress.
Any marks or identifying features on patients should be obscured in
videos so that patients can’t be easily discovered online. Patients
faces shouldn’t be shown unless the explicitly consent to this and
are told this will allow viewers to identify them and name them in
any social media posts using the video.
“Video shared may impact the patient socially or professionally in
the future,” Schierle said.
Patients also shouldn’t feel pressured to allow videos, and they
should know their medical care won’t be influenced by whether or not
they consent. When patients do permit filming, surgeons should make
sure it doesn’t interfere with the procedures, and they should have
another person do the filming so they can concentrate on the
patient.
“The public has a right to see uncensored video from the operating
room if they are interested, and we are all for the dissemination of
good-quality information,” Schierle added. “Where we have concerns
is in video that is of a more entertaining or self-serving nature at
the expense of the patient.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2fP36ZE Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery
Journal, online September 28, 2017.
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