Evaluating outcomes of plastic surgery in an ambulatory setting: an efficiency model for high-volume procedures in Northern Ontario (ORIGINAL ARTICLE)
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Title
Evaluating outcomes of plastic surgery in an ambulatory setting: an efficiency model for high-volume procedures in Northern Ontario (ORIGINAL ARTICLE)
Subject
ambulatory surgery, plastic surgery, complication rates, rural health services, Northern Ontario
Description
Background: Ambulatory plastic surgery has emerged as a safe and efficient alternative to hospital-based care, particularly in underserved areas
like Northern Ontario. This study aimed to evaluate the short-term outcomes of plastic surgery procedures performed in a Northern Ontario
ambulatory office setting.
Methods: A retrospective chart review was conducted for 505 procedures, performed from August 2023 to August 2024, at one plastic surgery
clinic. Patient factors, including age, gender, smoking status, use of blood thinners, primary diagnosis, and referring provider, were collected.
Along with surgical outcomes, including procedure type, complications, and urgent follow-up visits within 2 weeks of operation. Descriptive
evaluation was used to evaluate outcome trends.
Results: The majority of patient referrals came from primary care physicians for a wide range of procedures. The most common procedures
performed in the clinic were skin cancer biopsies and carpal tunnel release. The cohort included 505 patients aged 16 to 100 years (median
ageĀ 64), with 48.7% male, 51.1% female, and 0.2% unspecified. There was an overall incidence of 8% for postoperative complications, with
infections being the most frequent. Complication rates varied by procedure, with carpal tunnel release showing the lowest rate of 1.5%, and
punch biopsies showing the highest rate at 11.6% which decreased after a procedural change. The majority of complications arose among the
70-80 age range.
Conclusions: This study demonstrates that office-based plastic surgery procedures in Northern Ontario can be performed safely and efficiently. Findings support the growing role of ambulatory surgical care, particularly in regions with limited access to hospital-based services.
Tailored approaches for older patients, along with procedural refinements, can further enhance safety. Strengthening integration with primary
care may improve efficiency and outcomes. Further multicenter studies are recommended to validate these findings and inform broader
adoption.
like Northern Ontario. This study aimed to evaluate the short-term outcomes of plastic surgery procedures performed in a Northern Ontario
ambulatory office setting.
Methods: A retrospective chart review was conducted for 505 procedures, performed from August 2023 to August 2024, at one plastic surgery
clinic. Patient factors, including age, gender, smoking status, use of blood thinners, primary diagnosis, and referring provider, were collected.
Along with surgical outcomes, including procedure type, complications, and urgent follow-up visits within 2 weeks of operation. Descriptive
evaluation was used to evaluate outcome trends.
Results: The majority of patient referrals came from primary care physicians for a wide range of procedures. The most common procedures
performed in the clinic were skin cancer biopsies and carpal tunnel release. The cohort included 505 patients aged 16 to 100 years (median
ageĀ 64), with 48.7% male, 51.1% female, and 0.2% unspecified. There was an overall incidence of 8% for postoperative complications, with
infections being the most frequent. Complication rates varied by procedure, with carpal tunnel release showing the lowest rate of 1.5%, and
punch biopsies showing the highest rate at 11.6% which decreased after a procedural change. The majority of complications arose among the
70-80 age range.
Conclusions: This study demonstrates that office-based plastic surgery procedures in Northern Ontario can be performed safely and efficiently. Findings support the growing role of ambulatory surgical care, particularly in regions with limited access to hospital-based services.
Tailored approaches for older patients, along with procedural refinements, can further enhance safety. Strengthening integration with primary
care may improve efficiency and outcomes. Further multicenter studies are recommended to validate these findings and inform broader
adoption.
Creator
Emily R. Pynn, Priyanka Azad, Sanjay Azad
Source
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/ijcoms/lyaf020
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Date
22 November 2025
Contributor
Sri Wahyuni
Format
PDF
Language
English
Type
Text
Files
Collection
Citation
Emily R. Pynn, Priyanka Azad, Sanjay Azad, “Evaluating outcomes of plastic surgery in an ambulatory setting: an efficiency model for high-volume procedures in Northern Ontario (ORIGINAL ARTICLE),” Repository Horizon University Indonesia, accessed February 21, 2026, https://repository.horizon.ac.id/items/show/11314.