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There's a study in this month's journal Plastic
Surgery Nursing from the University of Florida reporting
on several indices of patients' self-image improvements after breast augmentation
surgery. A WebMD description of it can be read here. "So much attention is directed to men's sexuality issues; we have all seen countless commercials on drugs and therapy devoted to improving men's sexuality. Unfortunately, very little is discussed regarding women's sexuality issues," Figueroa-Haas said. "I strongly believe that my research shows that interventions such as cosmetic plastic surgery can address these sorts of issues for some women. For example, those women who may have breast changes due to nursing or from the inevitable natural aging process. These women may not feel as attractive, which could ultimately negatively impact their levels of self-esteem and sexuality." These kind of results really are not anything new
though. Similar series of varying quality have been reported in the Plastic
Surgery literature for almost 50 years. However,
I think it's somewhat redundant to publish such data so early in follow-up
which adds nothing much new to what's been published previously. The more
important longitudinal findings in these patients need to be followed
up years out, not months, to add something to our understanding
of psyhcological outcome endpoints. Keep in mind that data presented to
the FDA from the clinical trials required on silicone gel implants at
3-4 years out suggested much more conservative attribution of long-term
self-esteem or self-identity benefits.
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