When Is Breast Reduction Necessary?
By HospiMedica staff writers Posted on 13 Mar 2005 |
Both breast augmentation and breast-reduction surgery are generally considered as cosmetic. However, in some cases, the surgery is medically necessary. Some new guidelines may help surgeons and health insurers make the right decision.
For example, a doctor prescribes a breast reduction for a young woman who is five feet tall, weighs 135 pounds, and is 32 years old. A plastic surgeon recommends removing 500 g of breast tissue from each breast. Is this breast reduction surgery considered medically necessary and is it likely to be covered by health insurance?
When breast reduction or augmentation is performed on an abnormal structure of the body caused by disease, infection, congenital deformity, trauma or tumors, the reconstructive surgery is considered medically necessary and is generally done to improve the body's function, according to the American Medical Association (AMA, Chicago, IL, USA).
Physical reasons such as shoulder, back, and neck pain; grooving caused by brassiere straps and eczema; and the wearing of a normal-sized brassiere with a large cup size are some symptoms that surgery is medically necessary. Taking nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), years of chiropractic treatment without alleviation of symptoms, and symptoms and complaints typical for a diagnosis of macromastia (excessively large breasts) all point to a medical need for surgery, according to Dr. Skip Freedman, medical director at ALLMED Healthcare Management (Portland, OR, USA), a U.S. independent review organization (IRO) that offers a panel of experts to help payers ensure patient treatments are medically necessary.
Patients with congenital breast deformity or those who have experienced breast trauma, infection, tumors, or disease may qualify for breast augmentation or reduction. These include patients with Poland's disease or cancer, breast dropping caused by dramatic weight loss due to gastric surgery, significant breast asymmetry, or those who have had a mastectomy.
For example, a doctor prescribes a breast reduction for a young woman who is five feet tall, weighs 135 pounds, and is 32 years old. A plastic surgeon recommends removing 500 g of breast tissue from each breast. Is this breast reduction surgery considered medically necessary and is it likely to be covered by health insurance?
When breast reduction or augmentation is performed on an abnormal structure of the body caused by disease, infection, congenital deformity, trauma or tumors, the reconstructive surgery is considered medically necessary and is generally done to improve the body's function, according to the American Medical Association (AMA, Chicago, IL, USA).
Physical reasons such as shoulder, back, and neck pain; grooving caused by brassiere straps and eczema; and the wearing of a normal-sized brassiere with a large cup size are some symptoms that surgery is medically necessary. Taking nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), years of chiropractic treatment without alleviation of symptoms, and symptoms and complaints typical for a diagnosis of macromastia (excessively large breasts) all point to a medical need for surgery, according to Dr. Skip Freedman, medical director at ALLMED Healthcare Management (Portland, OR, USA), a U.S. independent review organization (IRO) that offers a panel of experts to help payers ensure patient treatments are medically necessary.
Patients with congenital breast deformity or those who have experienced breast trauma, infection, tumors, or disease may qualify for breast augmentation or reduction. These include patients with Poland's disease or cancer, breast dropping caused by dramatic weight loss due to gastric surgery, significant breast asymmetry, or those who have had a mastectomy.
Latest Surgical Techniques News
- Pioneering Sutureless Coronary Bypass Technology to Eliminate Open-Chest Procedures
- Intravascular Imaging for Guiding Stent Implantation Ensures Safer Stenting Procedures
- World's First AI Surgical Guidance Platform Allows Surgeons to Measure Success in Real-Time
- AI-Generated Synthetic Scarred Hearts Aid Atrial Fibrillation Treatment
- New Class of Bioadhesives to Connect Human Tissues to Long-Term Medical Implants
- New Transcatheter Valve Found Safe and Effective for Treating Aortic Regurgitation
- Minimally Invasive Valve Repair Reduces Hospitalizations in Severe Tricuspid Regurgitation Patients
- Tiny Robotic Tools Powered by Magnetic Fields to Enable Minimally Invasive Brain Surgery
- Magnetic Tweezers Make Robotic Surgery Safer and More Precise
- AI-Powered Surgical Planning Tool Improves Pre-Op Planning
- Novel Sensing System Restores Missing Sense of Touch in Minimally Invasive Surgery
- Headset-Based AR Navigation System Improves EVD Placement
- Higher Electrode Density Improves Epilepsy Surgery by Pinpointing Where Seizures Begin
- Open-Source Tool Optimizes Placement of Visual Brain Implants
- Easy-To-Apply Gel Could Prevent Formation of Post-Surgical Abdominal Adhesions
- Groundbreaking Leadless Pacemaker to Prevent Invasive Surgeries for Children
Channels
Critical Care
view channel
Ingestible Smart Capsule for Chemical Sensing in the Gut Moves Closer to Market
Intestinal gases are associated with several health conditions, including colon cancer, irritable bowel syndrome, and inflammatory bowel disease, and they have the potential to serve as crucial biomarkers... Read more
Novel Cannula Delivery System Enables Targeted Delivery of Imaging Agents and Drugs
Multiphoton microscopy has become an invaluable tool in neuroscience, allowing researchers to observe brain activity in real time with high-resolution imaging. A crucial aspect of many multiphoton microscopy... Read more
Novel Intrabronchial Method Delivers Cell Therapies in Critically Ill Patients on External Lung Support
Until now, administering cell therapies to patients on extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO)—a life-support system typically used for severe lung failure—has been nearly impossible.... Read morePatient Care
view channel
Portable Biosensor Platform to Reduce Hospital-Acquired Infections
Approximately 4 million patients in the European Union acquire healthcare-associated infections (HAIs) or nosocomial infections each year, with around 37,000 deaths directly resulting from these infections,... Read more
First-Of-Its-Kind Portable Germicidal Light Technology Disinfects High-Touch Clinical Surfaces in Seconds
Reducing healthcare-acquired infections (HAIs) remains a pressing issue within global healthcare systems. In the United States alone, 1.7 million patients contract HAIs annually, leading to approximately... Read more
Surgical Capacity Optimization Solution Helps Hospitals Boost OR Utilization
An innovative solution has the capability to transform surgical capacity utilization by targeting the root cause of surgical block time inefficiencies. Fujitsu Limited’s (Tokyo, Japan) Surgical Capacity... Read more
Game-Changing Innovation in Surgical Instrument Sterilization Significantly Improves OR Throughput
A groundbreaking innovation enables hospitals to significantly improve instrument processing time and throughput in operating rooms (ORs) and sterile processing departments. Turbett Surgical, Inc.... Read moreHealth IT
view channel
Printable Molecule-Selective Nanoparticles Enable Mass Production of Wearable Biosensors
The future of medicine is likely to focus on the personalization of healthcare—understanding exactly what an individual requires and delivering the appropriate combination of nutrients, metabolites, and... Read more
Smartwatches Could Detect Congestive Heart Failure
Diagnosing congestive heart failure (CHF) typically requires expensive and time-consuming imaging techniques like echocardiography, also known as cardiac ultrasound. Previously, detecting CHF by analyzing... Read moreBusiness
view channel
Expanded Collaboration to Transform OR Technology Through AI and Automation
The expansion of an existing collaboration between three leading companies aims to develop artificial intelligence (AI)-driven solutions for smart operating rooms with sophisticated monitoring and automation.... Read more