Experiences of women undergoing abdominoplasty in the public sector: a qualitative study

**Introduction** This study was designed to improve understanding of the experiences of women undergoing abdominoplasty in a public hospital setting, including their experience of processes of care, surgical treatment and outcomes of surgery. **Methods** This was a prospective, qualitative study,...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Nicola R Dean, Kristen Foley, Randall Long, Paul Ward
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Australian Society of Plastic Surgeons 2022-03-01
Series:Australasian Journal of Plastic Surgery
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.34239/ajops.v5n1.309
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850219988532592640
author Nicola R Dean
Kristen Foley
Randall Long
Paul Ward
author_facet Nicola R Dean
Kristen Foley
Randall Long
Paul Ward
author_sort Nicola R Dean
collection DOAJ
description **Introduction** This study was designed to improve understanding of the experiences of women undergoing abdominoplasty in a public hospital setting, including their experience of processes of care, surgical treatment and outcomes of surgery. **Methods** This was a prospective, qualitative study, with one-to-one interviews with women, transcription of interviews and development of themes. **Results** Twenty interviews were carried out with 16 women, with four women being interviewed before and after surgery and the remaining 12 being interviewed one time only. Messages emerging from the interviews included gratitude for treatment in the public sector, uncertainty associated with waiting times and surgeon allocation, and varied satisfaction with outcomes. This article also explores the evidence for the association between physical symptoms and rectus diastasis (separation of the rectus abdominis muscles) as well as mental health improvement. **Conclusion** Women undergoing abdominoplasty in the public sector are not a homogenous group, either in their motivations for surgery or their reported outcomes. This qualitative study found evidence for improvement in physical symptoms and psychological wellbeing in women undergoing abdominoplasty, which supports existing quantitative studies, but also highlights a need for clear information for public sector patients, especially relating to scars, and for liaison psychiatry. Criteria-based assessment contributes an additional burden for these patients.
format Article
id doaj-art-d40f7904e6264ba4bd87f9ae8928fb3a
institution OA Journals
issn 2209-170X
language English
publishDate 2022-03-01
publisher Australian Society of Plastic Surgeons
record_format Article
series Australasian Journal of Plastic Surgery
spelling doaj-art-d40f7904e6264ba4bd87f9ae8928fb3a2025-08-20T02:07:12ZengAustralian Society of Plastic SurgeonsAustralasian Journal of Plastic Surgery2209-170X2022-03-015110.34239/ajops.v5n1.309Experiences of women undergoing abdominoplasty in the public sector: a qualitative studyNicola R DeanKristen FoleyRandall LongPaul Ward**Introduction** This study was designed to improve understanding of the experiences of women undergoing abdominoplasty in a public hospital setting, including their experience of processes of care, surgical treatment and outcomes of surgery. **Methods** This was a prospective, qualitative study, with one-to-one interviews with women, transcription of interviews and development of themes. **Results** Twenty interviews were carried out with 16 women, with four women being interviewed before and after surgery and the remaining 12 being interviewed one time only. Messages emerging from the interviews included gratitude for treatment in the public sector, uncertainty associated with waiting times and surgeon allocation, and varied satisfaction with outcomes. This article also explores the evidence for the association between physical symptoms and rectus diastasis (separation of the rectus abdominis muscles) as well as mental health improvement. **Conclusion** Women undergoing abdominoplasty in the public sector are not a homogenous group, either in their motivations for surgery or their reported outcomes. This qualitative study found evidence for improvement in physical symptoms and psychological wellbeing in women undergoing abdominoplasty, which supports existing quantitative studies, but also highlights a need for clear information for public sector patients, especially relating to scars, and for liaison psychiatry. Criteria-based assessment contributes an additional burden for these patients.https://doi.org/10.34239/ajops.v5n1.309
spellingShingle Nicola R Dean
Kristen Foley
Randall Long
Paul Ward
Experiences of women undergoing abdominoplasty in the public sector: a qualitative study
Australasian Journal of Plastic Surgery
title Experiences of women undergoing abdominoplasty in the public sector: a qualitative study
title_full Experiences of women undergoing abdominoplasty in the public sector: a qualitative study
title_fullStr Experiences of women undergoing abdominoplasty in the public sector: a qualitative study
title_full_unstemmed Experiences of women undergoing abdominoplasty in the public sector: a qualitative study
title_short Experiences of women undergoing abdominoplasty in the public sector: a qualitative study
title_sort experiences of women undergoing abdominoplasty in the public sector a qualitative study
url https://doi.org/10.34239/ajops.v5n1.309
work_keys_str_mv AT nicolardean experiencesofwomenundergoingabdominoplastyinthepublicsectoraqualitativestudy
AT kristenfoley experiencesofwomenundergoingabdominoplastyinthepublicsectoraqualitativestudy
AT randalllong experiencesofwomenundergoingabdominoplastyinthepublicsectoraqualitativestudy
AT paulward experiencesofwomenundergoingabdominoplastyinthepublicsectoraqualitativestudy