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Mesh removal training – a new field of study
I wrote in a separate topic that mesh problems would be much better understood if mesh removal was a true area of research. Today I found this article about “skills accreditation” in mesh removal, I assume through on-the-job training since there are no official training centers, apparently.
If it’s happening in pelvic mesh it will probably follow in hernia repair mesh. Unfortunately, that doesn’t mean the problems will stop, just that people can get some of their life back before they die. Better than no hope.
https://www.bmj.com/content/372/bmj.n452.full
Excerpt –
“Surgeons who will work at new specialist mesh centres throughout England hope to establish their competence through credentialing in the field of pelvic mesh removal surgery, in the absence of a recognised training programme.””
Here is a link to one of the references in the abstract. Both of these are very recent, published in 2020/2021.
https://www.bmj.com/content/370/bmj.m3099
Excerpt –
“On 8 July the Conservative peer Julia Cumberlege published her much anticipated Independent Medicines and Medical Devices Safety Review, looking into the response of England’s healthcare system to patients’ reports of harm from drugs and medical devices. Commissioned in 2018, the review was conducted through the lens of three medical treatments: hormone pregnancy tests (mainly the drug Primodos), alleged to cause serious birth defects; the anti-epileptic sodium valproate, which can cause birth defects and developmental delays; and pelvic mesh, a surgical material (technically a medical device) implanted in thousands of women to treat organ prolapse and urinary incontinence. Mesh is now the subject of intense global scrutiny after reports of serious long term effects from material that has twisted, moved, disintegrated, or caused severe allergic reactions.”
- This discussion was modified 3 years, 7 months ago by Good intentions.
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