Endo Rosana Raquel, Fernandes Carlos Henrique, Fernandes Marcela, Santos Joao Baptista Gomes Dos, Angelini Luiz Carlos, Nakachima Luis Renato
Serviço de Cirurgia de Mão e Microcirurgia, Hospital do Servidor Público Municipal, São Paulo, SP, Brasil.
Departamento de Ortopedia e Traumatologia, Escola Paulista de Medicina, Instituto de Cirurgia da Mão, Universidade Federal de São Paulo, São Paulo, Brasil.
Rev Bras Ortop (Sao Paulo). 2019 May;54(3):309-315. doi: 10.1055/s-0039-1692433. Epub 2019 Jun 27.
This study evaluates the conditions for microvascular procedures found by hand surgeons in Brazilian clinical practices. A prospective, observational, and analytical primary clinical research conducted during the 37 Brazilian Congress of Hand Surgery, from March 30 to April 1 , 2017, in Belo Horizonte, in which physicians answered 12 closed, objective, multiple-choice questions regarding their geographic region, type of institution (public or private), microsurgical training, time of experience, technical conditions, the availability of a standby team for emergencies and compensation. The study analyzed 143 hand surgeons; among them, 65.7% participants were based at the Southeast region, 13.3% in the Northeast region, 11.9% in the South region, 6.3% in the Central-West region and 2.8% in the North region. Regarding the time of experience, 43.4% of the hand surgeons had less than 5 years, 16.8% had 5 to 10 years, 23.8% 10 to 20 years, and 23% had more than 20 years of practice in microvascular surgery. Seven percent of the surgeons had no training in microvascular surgery; for 63.6%, training occurred during medical residency, whereas 30.8% were trained in another institution, and 7.7% in another country. Among these surgeons, 76.9% worked at both private and public hospitals, 14.7% at private hospitals and 5.6% at public hospitals. Regarding compensation, 1.8% of the surgeons considered it adequate, and 98.2%, inadequate in public hospitals, whereas 5.0% considered it adequate, and 95.0%, inadequate in private hospitals. This research shows that most surgeons were trained in microsurgery, had never performed reattachments, and considered that compensation is inadequate; moreover, standby teams were not available. There are few, unevenly distributed hand surgeons with microsurgical ability in emergency settings, and their compensation is low.