Ask HN: Is there an exhaustive list of surgical procedures?
I've only found small lists of the most common procedures. How do hospitals handle this? I'd like to obtain / compile a list of all surgical procedures as a driver for thinking about / working on semi- then fully-autonomous robotic surgery.
23 comments
[ 3.4 ms ] story [ 67.4 ms ] threadhttps://www.google.com/search?q=Trump+administration+price+t...
https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2021/07/02/1012317...
https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2021/10/14/1045828...
I would just google the hospital name and and the word chargemaster next to it.
Best of luck!
Assuming you are in the USA- they just passed a law where all hospitals will need to publicly publish the list of all the procedures they do and the cost. Until now this,as I understand this was guarded very tightly and the common person would never get it. This information is maintained in what is called a “chargemaster” (charge description master). So I am thinking you can possibly download a few chargemasters abd then process it via queries etc and get a longer list of procedures. Hopefully this set you in the right direction.
Also looked like hn user aurizon posted google and npr links a few comments below about how this law is being fought.
https://www.cms.gov/hospital-price-transparency
https://stanfordhealthcare.org/content/dam/SHC/patientsandvi...
There are thousands of CPT codes, and even more procedures, since one CPT code could describe multiple different procedures, and some procedures involve combining multiple CPT codes. There is no formal approval process for new surgical procedures, and there is no comprehensive list. New procedures are invented all the time.
Your best bet is to pick a specific area, then find a surgeon to shadow. A lot of details of surgical techniques are not written down anywhere, and you learn by working with other surgeons. There are a few books that go through the basic procedural details. For example, Zollinger's "Atlas of surgical operations" is a good reference for abdominal surgery, and Kandarpa's "Handbook of interventional radiologic procedures" is a good reference for interventional radiology procedures. "Biodesign" by Zenios is a good introduction to inventing new medical devices.
The medical industry does not provide the information required to be confident in your personal outcome. At best they can provide statistics about populations. On an individual basis, it is an absolute crap shoot.
I think that, yes, eventually we will need to have the robot surgeons watch operations and listen to / question human surgeons. The problem is that we're not really able to have a robust teaching / learning conversation and show/tell with and AI yet.
But just out of curiosity, could you tell more about what you’re up to slash what you’re thinking about?