Olivero66 wrote:High volume can be a great advantage, if it's paired with high quality conscience. So every operation with thorough concentration, as if it were the very first one. The problem arises when a high volume guy starts being sloppy, careless and lightheaded.
Here are some of my thoughts on "high volume" vs "low volume".
First, the lower volume implant guys I visited were actually very "high volume" and busy with respect to their overall practices. Fewer implants but lots more other stuff going on. Most really good doctors are normally very busy. I don't think the volume of implants a guy does tells you much of anything at all about how much time and attention he (or she) will devote to you and your implant surgery. The lowest volume implant guy I visited ("5-10 per month") had the least amount of time for pre-op consult and questions, was late, cut off our appointment due to other higher priority stuff. And, I learned, he left ALL the followup to a PA.
Dr Eid claims to be the highest volume implant guy. Not sure if that's true. But if you do the math, if all he did was implants, even at his "high" volume, he wouldn't actually be all that busy. And in fact, he was the surgeon who had the most time, made the most time and was the most accessible of the other surgeons I visited. I see no reason to believe a "high volume" implant surgeon is any more likely to be "sloppy, careless and lightheaded" than any other lower volume implant surgeon who is doing as much or likely even more surgeries and procedures, but just other things than implants. The way a surgeon runs his overall practice is much more important, I would think, than the sheer number of implant surgeries he does or doesn't do.
I read many medical journal articles, including several behind paywalls that I had to shell out money for, before I had my surgery. There's no question in my mind that this surgery requires quite a few judgement calls. Everything is not just neat and precise. A good surgeon who takes advantage of lots of experience should tend to make better judgement calls over time. But, just because he's high volume doesn't mean he's a good surgeon. Its just that experience gives an advantage to a good surgeon. And even with lots of experience, it doesn't mean he makes every judgement call right. If he could make every one exactly right, it wouldn't be a judgement call at all.
So, when someone has a bad outcome, its understandable to be angry and frustrated. Somewhat understandable, but possibly wrong, to blame the surgeon though. It could indeed be that the surgeon is not very competent. True. It could be he's a great surgeon that had an off day. True. It could also be, though, that he's a good surgeon, at the top of his game, making his very best professional judgement calls, and still he didn't get it quite right. Seems to me that's the nature of this or any surgery. There's risk. Even the best guy doesn't and can't get it perfect every time, and that doesn't make him a bad surgeon.
Unfortunately when you're the guy with a bad result, its hard to know the reason. Bad surgeon, good surgeon and off day, or a good guy's best judgement just wasn't good enough in your one isolated case. Even the top docs warn (at least Dr Eid did with me) that a revision surgery was a real risk. I took that risk seriously, and not just as a CYA statement. A good doc, it seems to me, should also have a better chance of getting it right when a revision is needed since there is a benchmark for what was right and wrong the first time around. Needing a third surgery (second revision) is really really unfortunate.