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Best
Doctors, Inc. Puts Thomas L. Lyons, MD in top 5%
Prestigious Peer Review Picks GYN Surgeon from 1.5 Million
ATLANTA, GA—After a rigorous peer
review, the exclusive Best Doctors in America® 2007-2008 database
includes pioneering laparoscopic GYN surgeon Thomas L. Lyons, MD, in its
exclusive roster where he has been included numerous times over its 15
year history.
To qualify who exactly is a “Best
Doctor,” the organization asks medical specialists questions like, “If
you or a loved one needed a doctor in your specialty, to whom would you
refer them?” Doctors have unique, “inside” perspective about who’s at
the top of their profession, who’s up on the latest advances in their
field, and therefore, where they personally would turn for
state-of-the-art care when faced with a serious medical problem.
How are 50,000 of
the Best Doctors worldwide chosen?
Continuous peer-to-peer surveys help
Best Doctors identify specialists who are considered by fellow
physicians to be the most skilled in their fields and most qualified for
reviewing and treating complex medical conditions. The polling process
is anonymous and confidential, qualitative and quantitative. It provides
detailed profiles of each physician, including his or her practice,
research programs and diagnostic and treatment procedures. They survey
doctors in more than 400 subspecialties of medicine.
How does Best Doctors ensure reliable,
impartial results?
The group is totally independent.
Doctors do not pay to be included in the database, nor are they paid to
participate in the survey. The judgment of peers is the determining
factor. And to get opinions with weight and professional credibility,
the very best are consulted.
Best Doctors contacts all currently
elected physicians, including many department heads at major teaching
hospitals, and asks them to rate specialists outside their own
facilities. The process of peer review requires that every listed
physician be re-evaluated with each new survey. With person-to-person
telephone interviews and proprietary polling and balloting software,
Best Doctors collects up to 1.5 million evaluations annually. Only 5% of
the doctors in any country are actually selected to become Best Doctors.
Evolution of a
World-Class Surgeon
Dr. Lyons began teaching surgeons from around the world in the late
1980s as he trained others on laparoscopic gallbladder removal. From
there he began exploration and training on tubal pregnancies, ovarian
cysts, fibroids, hysterectomy and endometriosis. At the present time,
even certain cancers can be removed laparoscopically.
In the early
1990s, telesurgery revolutionized the field and Dr. Lyons began
performing procedures in his customary operating environment while
surgeons in Europe or Asia watched, asked questions and learned
remotely.
What Your Doctor Doesn’t Tell You
Dr. Lyons has
trained thousands of surgeons on the Laparoscopic Supracervical
Hysterectomy (LSH) technique he developed nearly 20 years ago. It leaves
the cervix intact as a keystone support to the pelvic area and enables
better sexual function post surgery. However, most doctors don't perform
it.
Some surgeons refuse
to perform laparoscopic procedures on a large uterus, and say it can’t
be done. Left out in that explanation is, “because I can’t do it.” The
size of the uterus is not an issue or a problem for Dr. Lyons.
"It's especially
important that patients choose a surgeon who is experienced in working
with lasers and laparoscopy. LSH requires more skill than open
abdominal hysterectomy. It's easier on the patient, but more challenging
for the surgeon," explained Dr. Lyons.
One of the most important factors in
helping people choose appropriate medical care is a comprehensive
understanding of the reasons for treatment, the risks, and the potential
benefits. This especially applies to hysterectomy. If hysterectomy has
been suggested as an option, women should carefully weigh the pros and
cons, the alternative treatments, the potential benefits and risks, and
the physician's track record.
Many surgeons will
attempt a laparoscopic procedure and feel it necessary to convert to an
open surgery with a long incision during the procedure. Make sure to
ask your surgeon about his or her conversion ratio. Dr. Lyons'
conversion ratio is less than one percent.
For information
contact the Center for Women’s Care & Reproductive Surgery in Atlanta at
770-352-0037 or toll-free 888-545-0400. Offices also at Lake Oconee and
Blue Ridge, Georgia.
Email the Center for Women's Care
Center for Women's Care &
Reproductive Surgery© 2006
1140 Hammond Drive, Suite
F6230
Atlanta, Georgia 30328.
Copyright 2005
Toll Free 1 (888) 545-0400
Metro Atlanta (770) 352-0037
This page last updated
03/04/2008
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