Though he is not a
plastic surgeon, Dr. Peter Scheer has repaired some of the most
grisly visages in Palm Springs, Calif.
There was the Jet
Skier whose face was sliced up when he roared into a water-ski towrope.
There was the suicidal man whose jittery trigger finger skewed his
aim, sparing his life but blowing off the front of his face. There
were the two victims of a machete-wielding bar patron: the unintended
recipient, whose skull was in the way of the blade's backswing,
and the actual target, who got scalped.
Scheer is an oral
surgeon, a dentist with extensive operating-room training. In emergencies,
he and his fellow oral surgeons often have mended facial features
beyond the mouth. Now they want permission in California to perform
nose jobs, eyelifts and other elective plastic surgeries that are
among the most lucrative of operations. Physicians with medical
school degrees oppose the effort.
This clash over cosmetic
surgery is anything but pretty. Following the course taken by eye
doctors, medical assistants and holistic healers, the oral surgeons
are making their case before the California Legislature, where the
operating tools of choice are the campaign donation and the lobbyist
rather than the scalpel and the sponge.
Doctors, nurses, dentists
and other practitioners make up one of the state's best-endowed
lobbies. Their political action committees have injected more than
$2 million into campaign kitties for this fall, state records indicate.
They also have spent $14 million on lobbyists this year.
Their rhetoric can
be as blunt as their deployment of cash; they often diagnose their
adversaries as suffering from greed, sloth, hypocrisy, incompetence
and inflated egos.
"I've been doing rhinoplastics
for 30 years and it's one of the most delicate procedures you can
do. There's no way on God's earth these people can go in and do
nose jobs," said Dr. Harvey Zarem, a Santa Monica physician who
is president of the California Society of Plastic Surgeons. "The
exclusive reason [oral surgeons] want to do this is money. They
want to make more money."
"The plastics people
want you to believe these are difficult surgeries. They are not,"
said Dr. Larry Moore, former chief of oral surgery at Long Beach
Memorial Medical Center. "No one is standing up and saying, `We've
got to get these dentists out of the emergency room,' because if
we left the emergency room they'd have to go back. In many hospitals,
you can't get a [plastic] surgeon for trauma cases, and the reason
is, it doesn't pay."
`Scope-of-practice'
debates
The cosmetic-surgery
proposal is one among many "scope of practice" debates pending in
Sacramento.
Podiatrists want authorization
to amputate parts of feet and perform surgery up to the ankle. Physical
therapists want to be permitted to treat healthy as well as injured
people, allowing them to tap into the fitness industry. In the last
four years, at least 48 such measures have been proposed.
"Because health-care
funding is limited, we have more and more people scrambling for
titles and legitimacy," said state Sen. Liz Figueroa, a Democrat
and chairwoman of the Senate Business and Professions Committee,
which referees these disputes.
It is only in the
last few years that oral surgeons have started pressing for legislative
help. Until the late 1990s, many routinely performed voluntary cosmetic
surgery, thinking it was appropriate, given their four years' training
in hospital surgical residencies.
There, they learned
how to repair damage to the jawbone and teeth resulting from facial
malformations as well as gunshots, car crashes and dog attacks.
Elective cosmetic surgery seemed to employ the same skills under
less harrowing circumstances, the oral surgeons reasoned.
Also, they noted,
the state Dental Practice Act says dentists can perform work on
teeth, gums, jaws "or associated structures," the last of which
oral surgeons interpreted to include lips, noses and chins.
State officials crack
down.
California's health-care
regulators began to crack down on outpatient plastic surgery after
several patients died from wrongly applied anesthesia. Though oral
surgeons were not implicated in those deaths, in 2000 the Dental
Board of California issued a clarification that state law did not
authorize dentists to do cosmetic procedures unless they were part
of the treatment of a dental condition.
The oral surgeons
enlisted the support of Senate President John Burton, who has sponsored
so many scope-of-practice bills that he is known as "the pope of
scope."
Burton's bill would
authorize the state dental board to issue permits to perform cosmetic
surgery on the neck and face to any dentist who had completed a
residency program in oral and maxillofacial surgery, and paid $150
for a permit. California has about 600 oral surgeons.
The plastic surgeons
gained the support of the California Medical Association as well
as the state's association of emergency room doctors.
The physicians argue
that oral surgeons may be competent to do spot repairs to bone but
cannot be trusted to dexterously mold flesh.
Despite such arguments,
so far the oral surgeons are winning. The Senate passed their bill
May 19 and now there is a lobbying campaign to kill the measure
in the Assembly.