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Cultural Perspectives in Facial Allotransplantation

Facial allotransplantation is a clinical reality, proposed to provide improved functional and aesthetic outcomes to conventional methods of facial reconstruction. Multidisciplinary efforts are needed in addressing not just the surgical and immunological issues but the psychological and sociological...

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Autores principales: Tan, Pearlie W.W., Patel, Ashish S., Taub, Peter J., Lampert, Joshua A., Xipoleas, George, Santiago, Gabriel F., Silver, Lester, Sheriff, Hemin O., Lin, Tsan-Shiun, Cooter, Rodney, Diogo, Franco, Salazaard, Bruno, Kim, Byung Jun, Lee, Yoon Ho, Ogawa, Rei
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Open Science Company, LLC 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3427025/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22977674
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author Tan, Pearlie W.W.
Patel, Ashish S.
Taub, Peter J.
Lampert, Joshua A.
Xipoleas, George
Santiago, Gabriel F.
Silver, Lester
Sheriff, Hemin O.
Lin, Tsan-Shiun
Cooter, Rodney
Diogo, Franco
Salazaard, Bruno
Kim, Byung Jun
Lee, Yoon Ho
Ogawa, Rei
author_facet Tan, Pearlie W.W.
Patel, Ashish S.
Taub, Peter J.
Lampert, Joshua A.
Xipoleas, George
Santiago, Gabriel F.
Silver, Lester
Sheriff, Hemin O.
Lin, Tsan-Shiun
Cooter, Rodney
Diogo, Franco
Salazaard, Bruno
Kim, Byung Jun
Lee, Yoon Ho
Ogawa, Rei
author_sort Tan, Pearlie W.W.
collection PubMed
description Facial allotransplantation is a clinical reality, proposed to provide improved functional and aesthetic outcomes to conventional methods of facial reconstruction. Multidisciplinary efforts are needed in addressing not just the surgical and immunological issues but the psychological and sociological aspects as well. In view of this, an international survey was designed and conducted to demonstrate that attitudes toward facial allotransplantation are highly influenced by cultural background. Of all countries surveyed, France had the highest percentage of respondents willing to donate their faces (59%) and Iraq had the lowest (19%). A higher percentage of respondents were willing to accepting a face transplant (68%) than donate their face after death (41%). Countries with a dominant Western population show greater percentages of willingness to accept a face transplant, as they exhibit more positive variables, that is, (1) acceptance of plastic surgery for disfigurement and for cosmetic reasons and (2) awareness to the world's first face transplant. Countries with a dominant Western population also show greater percentages of willingness to donate their faces after death, as they exhibit more positive variables, that is, (1) positive attitude to organ donation by being an organ donor themselves, (2) acceptance of plastic surgery if disfigured, and (3) awareness to the world's first face transplant. Although religion was sometimes cited as a reason for not donating their faces, data analysis has shown religion not to be a strong associating factor to willingness to donate a face after death.
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spelling pubmed-34270252012-09-13 Cultural Perspectives in Facial Allotransplantation Tan, Pearlie W.W. Patel, Ashish S. Taub, Peter J. Lampert, Joshua A. Xipoleas, George Santiago, Gabriel F. Silver, Lester Sheriff, Hemin O. Lin, Tsan-Shiun Cooter, Rodney Diogo, Franco Salazaard, Bruno Kim, Byung Jun Lee, Yoon Ho Ogawa, Rei Eplasty Journal Article Facial allotransplantation is a clinical reality, proposed to provide improved functional and aesthetic outcomes to conventional methods of facial reconstruction. Multidisciplinary efforts are needed in addressing not just the surgical and immunological issues but the psychological and sociological aspects as well. In view of this, an international survey was designed and conducted to demonstrate that attitudes toward facial allotransplantation are highly influenced by cultural background. Of all countries surveyed, France had the highest percentage of respondents willing to donate their faces (59%) and Iraq had the lowest (19%). A higher percentage of respondents were willing to accepting a face transplant (68%) than donate their face after death (41%). Countries with a dominant Western population show greater percentages of willingness to accept a face transplant, as they exhibit more positive variables, that is, (1) acceptance of plastic surgery for disfigurement and for cosmetic reasons and (2) awareness to the world's first face transplant. Countries with a dominant Western population also show greater percentages of willingness to donate their faces after death, as they exhibit more positive variables, that is, (1) positive attitude to organ donation by being an organ donor themselves, (2) acceptance of plastic surgery if disfigured, and (3) awareness to the world's first face transplant. Although religion was sometimes cited as a reason for not donating their faces, data analysis has shown religion not to be a strong associating factor to willingness to donate a face after death. Open Science Company, LLC 2012-08-23 /pmc/articles/PMC3427025/ /pubmed/22977674 Text en Copyright © 2012 The Author(s) http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ This is an open-access article whereby the authors retain copyright of the work. The article is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Journal Article
Tan, Pearlie W.W.
Patel, Ashish S.
Taub, Peter J.
Lampert, Joshua A.
Xipoleas, George
Santiago, Gabriel F.
Silver, Lester
Sheriff, Hemin O.
Lin, Tsan-Shiun
Cooter, Rodney
Diogo, Franco
Salazaard, Bruno
Kim, Byung Jun
Lee, Yoon Ho
Ogawa, Rei
Cultural Perspectives in Facial Allotransplantation
title Cultural Perspectives in Facial Allotransplantation
title_full Cultural Perspectives in Facial Allotransplantation
title_fullStr Cultural Perspectives in Facial Allotransplantation
title_full_unstemmed Cultural Perspectives in Facial Allotransplantation
title_short Cultural Perspectives in Facial Allotransplantation
title_sort cultural perspectives in facial allotransplantation
topic Journal Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3427025/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22977674
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