|
Value Add
Vascular Surgery -Time for Recognition
Vascular disease kills and cripples almost as many Indians
as does a heart disease or cancer
Answers to problems in vascular surgery, like the refinement
of diagnostic techniques and the development of biologically better small arterial
substitutes, are slowly emerging. But what has so far eluded is independent
recognition of vascular surgery as a separate specialty.
In a historical perspective, these problems are not unexpected.
For centuries, even millennia, medicine was an undivided unitary segment of
human interaction with the hostility of nature. There was no conceivable reason
to parcel out the meager factual cargo that encompassed the knowledge of diseases
and the (usually fruitless) attempts to deal with them.
A physician was a person whose identity was sharply defined
within an unchanging circle of activity. It was only in relatively recent times
(some 300 years ago), that the first dichotomy appeared in this image: the recognition
of a new type of physician who used his or her hands in treating disease, that
is, the surgeon. A veritable deluge of change came as medicine assumed the aspects
of science no more than 100 years ago. Internal medicine and surgery assumed
sharply distinguished silhouettes during the last 50 years; their further fragmentation
has resembled a chain reaction.
This process has forced each subdivision of the large entity
of medicine to face the same problem of defining its identity, as we now see
in vascular surgery. Elemental and vitally important questions arose: Is the
existence of the new subdivision justified by the goal it seeks to achieve?
What exactly is the scope of its legitimate interest? Who is entitled to enter
it? How does one acquire this entitlement?
"From
the beginning, the existence of independent vascular surgery as a specialty
was challenged by the Medical Council of India (MCI)"
- Dr Gaurav Singal
Senior Vascular Surgeon and Chief Institute Of Vascular Sciences
IVY Hospital, Mohali
|
The difficulties do not lie only at clinical level; a mundane
concern also enters the picture. The practitioners of the parent discipline
instinctively resent the contraction of their territory. The interests of the
new specialty often conflict with the aspirations of other fields that have
been newly created.
The need for the very existence of new branches is often
questioned. All these historical conflicts have afflicted the birth and growth
of vascular surgery.
Everyone knows about heart diseases, but very few know about
vascular diseases. In fact, vascular disease kills and cripples almost as many
Indians as does a heart disease or cancer. The sheer magnitude of the problem
of vascular disease in India is staggering.
Although there is no accurate vascular registry, the fact
that there are over 25 million diabetics in the country is just a small pointer
to the vast numbers of the undiagnosed vascular cases. Patients having severe
vascular diseases have been treated for low backache and arthritis for years.
It is only the onset of peripheral gangrene which brings to light the fact that
arterial pulsations have been absent for long periods of time hitherto unnoticed.
Even after diagnosis, the only treatment for these unfortunate cases has been
amputation, which leaves the primary vascular problem unsolved. The lack of
awareness of the disease is so acute, that even some cardio-vascular surgeons
have never heard of a separate, independent vascular surgery department or a
vascular surgeon, leave aside general practitioners. A truly tragic situation
indeed!
From the beginning, the existence of independent vascular
surgery as a specialty was challenged by the Medical Council of India (MCI),
as in India it is still considered to be a part of the broad speciality of cardio-thoracic-vascular
surgery (CTVS). To the exception MCI has granted Madras Medical College, Chennai
to start the MCh training programme in vascular surgery, but unfortunately the
facility can only be availed by the surgeons of the state, thereby denying valuable
training opportunity to the surgeons from rest of the country.
However, all the hope is not lost for vascular patients in
India. Thanks to the effort of National Board of Examination (NBE), New Delhi,
which realised the magnitude of the problem. With a vision and mission in 2001,
the NBE started a two-year fellowship programme in peripheral vascular surgery
and hence giving a separate independent recognition to this subject. Presently,
this course is available in only three major cities and because of its popularity
has been converted into a full fledged three years programme from 2008 onwards.
Not only this Sri Chitra Institute, Trivandrum has also started the Mch programme
in vascular surgery from 2008 onwards. This suffices to say the growing popularity
of this speciality in medical fraternity.
In spite of this, the picture is not clear. Cardiac surgeons
in India still claim themselves to be the best vascular surgeons, even though
in reality there operative vascular work is less than two per cent and their
CTVS training is focussed only towards cardiac surgery. In fact. the approach,
diagnosis and therapy of vascular diseases is very much different from the approach
to a patient with heart disease. What is required is a separate recognised,
independent vascular surgery department, which can take care of peripheral vascular
system.
Not only that, to confuse and complicate the issue further
we now have general surgeons, thoracic surgeons and general surgeons with some
experience in vascular surgery, all claiming to do vascular operations. Now
even cardiologists and radiologists are claiming themselves in the race of treating
and eliminating vascular diseases.
This conceptual puzzle kept many hundreds of surgeons in
resentful confusion for years. However the situation is changing slowly but
surely.
Hospitals concerned with their professional standing are increasingly inclined
to grant vascular privileges to new staff members, only if they are certified
by the MCI or NBE as having special or added qualifications in vascular surgery.
The image of the vascular surgery is gradually acquiring
formal recognition .Time is not far away when this speciality will get its due
and will go on to serve the ailing community.
|