As soon surgeons in France had performed the first partial face
transplant late in November, psychologists began to question whether
the patient was mentally stable enough to handle the stressful,
high-risk procedure. Her dog had mauled the unidentified woman's face,
and doctors had said the damage was too severe for reconstructive
surgery. Evidence suggested the woman was suicidal or at a minimum
traumatized, but surgeon Jean-Michel Dubernard of Edouard Herriot
Hospital in Lyon told the media that the woman had undergone through
psychological testing that showed she was ready for the transplant's
challenges.

Since then, experts have begun to discuss how any analyst could fully
know if an individual were "ready" for such a novel procedure. Some
psychological readiness criteria exist for patients who seek elective
plastic surgery, but there is little literature about the mental
attributes that make someone a good candidate for reconstructive
surgery, much less a highly visible transplant.

Critic of the French operation say that in addition to needing the
mettle to follow post surgical procedures and stick with
anti-tissue-rejection medication and side effects, the woman will have
to withstand intense public scrutiny, and they wonder if she is up to
it. But Elaine Walker, professor of psychology and neuroscience at
Emory University, notes the patient's perspective, "the stresses may
not trump the stress of living with the original disfigurement."

Walker points out that the patient essentially had to choose between
three psychologically challenging options: live with a terrible
disfigurement that would very likely instill in her significant social
anxiety, attempt a protracted series of reconstructive surgeries that
doctors said might not succeed, or undergo the risky face transplant.
"None of the alternatives would be free of psychological stress,"
observes.


Happy Learning,


Yovan P. Putra


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