AI Article Synopsis

  • The article argues that vascularized composite allotransplantation (VCA) can address "social death" caused by severe disfigurement in the face, hands, and larynx, challenging the perception that VCA is merely life-enhancing.
  • A study reviewed case reports and narratives of patients who underwent these transplants, revealing that the social aspects of their experiences were crucial in recovering from social death, while traditional medical models were not adequately applicable.
  • By recognizing social death as a factor in patient evaluation for VCA, the article suggests that these transplants could be framed as lifesaving procedures, influencing the understanding of their risks and benefits.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Most solid organ transplantation is viewed as lifesaving, whereas vascularized composite allotransplantation (VCA) has been viewed as life enhancing. This article challenges the latter and argues that "social death" evident in severe face, hand, and larynx disfigurement can be potentially treated via VCA. Social death (from a social science perspective) consists of a combination of 7 components: social isolation, loneliness, ostracism, loss of personhood, change of role and identity, harm, and disfigurement.

Methods: In February 2016, PubMed and Google were searched for case reports of human face, hand, and larynx transplantation. Patient and team narratives were then coded for components of social death using social science and medical model criteria.

Results: Eleven narratives were identified among 9 articles. The social science model (but not the medical model) described pretransplant social death and the resolution of social death by receiving VCA. Notably, the medical model of social death was deemed unsuitable for application to VCA. This is because case narratives consistently contradict elements of the medical model.

Conclusions: By including social death as a patient inclusion criterion for face, hand, and larynx VCA, these transplants can be considered lifesaving. Additionally, because VCA requires lifelong immunosuppressant medication, considering VCA as a lifesaving intervention improves the technology's risk-benefit analysis. Guidance for assessing social death is provided.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6022947PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2374373517730556DOI Listing

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