Subscribe to RSS

DOI: 10.5999/aps.2014.41.1.101
Plastic Surgery and Aggressive Skating: Can Business Mix with Pleasure?

INTRODUCTION
The therapeutic experience of both patient and dedicated clinician striving to deliver optimal care is shaped by the assumed mutual interest and benefit to both parties. The caregiver can shape the environment in order to create an experience more rewarding than a mere encounter. Technical aspects such as time allocation, amicable staff, ample equipment supply, and teamwork contribute to a productive working environment. However, the major component affecting the atmosphere of and satisfaction with therapeutic activity is the state of mind of the dominant figure-the surgeon. Can we do more to enhance the experience and relive the original thrill we had when we began training as novices delivering patient care? Do we have the capacity to sustain the excitement of the practice of medicine? This essay is an attempt to invite others to join an adventure of virtual imagery. This proposal is achieved through mental exercise, combining various sides of the physician work and play, in a manner that can boost our spirits and turn an ordinary routine encounter into a fascinating challenge.
Publication History
Received: 13 May 2013
Accepted: 12 August 2013
Article published online:
02 May 2022
© 2014. The Korean Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons. This is an open access article published by Thieme under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License, permitting unrestricted noncommercial use, distribution, and reproduction so long as the original work is given appropriate credit. Contents may not be used for commercial purposes. (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/)
Thieme Medical Publishers, Inc.
333 Seventh Avenue, 18th Floor, New York, NY 10001, USA
-
REFERENCES
- 1 Chase RA. Belaboring a principle. Ann Plast Surg 1983; 11: 255-260
- 2 Gillies HD, Millard DR. The principles and art of plastic surgery. Boston: Little, Brown; 1957
- 3 Millard Jr DR. Plastic peregrinations. Plast Reconstr Surg (1946) 1950; 5: 26-53
- 4 Millard DR. Principlization of Plastic Surgery. Boston: Little, Brown; 1986
- 5 Major MJ, Beaudoin AJ, Kurath P. et al. Biomechanics of aggressive inline skating: landing and balancing on a grind rail. J Sports Sci 2007; 25: 1411-1422
- 6 Hilgert RE, Besch L, Behnke B. et al. Injury pattern caused by aggressive inline skating. Sportverletz Sportschaden 2004; 18: 196-203