The American College of Surgeons Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery Accreditation and Quality Improvement Program (MBSAQIP) is dedicated to enhancing the safety and quality of care for bariatric patients in the United States and Canada. Sites that participate in one of our Quality Programs, including MBSAQIP, earn the distinction as an ACS Surgical Quality Partner (ACS SQP).
Applicable to both inpatient and outpatient bariatric surgery centers, nearly 1,000 sites in the US and Canada have undergone independent, voluntary, and rigorous peer evaluations. MBSAQIP accreditation promotes uniform standards and continuous quality improvement.
Bariatric centers face several challenges including insufficient and inaccurate data, variability in care and outcomes, complex procedures with serious potential complications, limited resources, and diminished margins.
With the MBSAQIP, centers can receive high-quality clinical data, standards developed and approved by surgeon experts to guide the treatment of specialized issues, efficient resource allocation, and resources to develop a proactive quality culture.
Through the MBSAQIP, centers will be able to:
Study Clarifies Link between Obesity and Surgical Complications
The Bulletin of the American College of Surgeons breaks down a study published in the Journal of the American College Surgeons that explores the links between obesity, length of surgical operations, and recovery time, as well as the usefulness of the Body Mass Index.
The Operative Word: Long-Term Outcomes after Adolescent Bariatric Surgery
In this episode, Dr. Coleman is joined by Nestor F. De la Cruz-Muñoz Jr, MD, Professor of Surgery and Section Chief of Bariatric Surgery at the University of Miami. They discuss his study, which demonstrates the lasting, positive impact of bariatric surgery even decades later, and confirms that bariatric surgery should not be denied to adolescents struggling with morbid obesity.
House of Surgery Podcast: 2022 ACS Inaugural Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery Lecture
This episode features Dr. Bruce Schirmer, a bariatric surgeon from Charlottesville, Virginia, who delivered the inaugural Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery Lecture during Clinical Congress 2022. In his talk, “Don’t Stop Now,” Dr. Schirmer discusses the progress of bariatric surgery over the past 40 years and encourages more work to understand the disease of obesity.