Abstract

The increasing complexities in medicine, in medical education, and in plastic surgery seem to almost defy resolution. The best way to cope with these complexities, and to provide opportunity on an individual or a group basis, is by adherence to quality training program of the type which has served us well and in which the objective is constant. This implies the selection of high-quality candidates for training, and the control of resident flow, so that we may continue as a learned profession. History witnesses change--and time will bring new philsophies, new surgeons with changing values, and a public oriented to a different system of medical care. Shakespeare said, "when the day ends, the end will be known." I am confident that plastic surgery, with its traditional emphasis on quality and excellence, will long endure as a most learned profession.

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