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Bayard

(22,120 posts)
Wed Jan 15, 2020, 02:32 PM Jan 2020

The First African American to Receive a Face Transplant.

His Story Could Change Health Care

?

obert Chelsea turned down the first face he was offered. It was a fine face, one that could have taken him off the transplant waiting list after just a couple months. But Chelsea—severely disfigured after a catastrophic car accident five years earlier—was in no hurry. He’d gotten used to tilting his head back so food and water wouldn’t fall out of his nearly lipless mouth. He knew how to respond compassionately to children who stared in shock and fear. The face, offered in May 2018, had belonged to a man with skin that was much fairer than what remained of Chelsea’s—so light that Chelsea, who is African American, couldn’t bear the thought of becoming “a totally different looking person.”

Chelsea’s doctors understood his hesitance. Face transplants in general are rare. Since the first partial one was performed in France in 2005, fewer than 50 have been completed worldwide. A new patient joining the ranks is always noteworthy, but Chelsea’s case carries even more weight than usual. Because he is the first African American to receive a full face transplant, Chelsea’s treatment is expected to have ripple effects that transcend his case. Disparities in the medical system that cause black Americans to die at higher rates than whites of so many things—like heart disease, cancer diabetes and HIV/AIDS—have also produced gaps in organ donation and transplantation. Widespread mistrust of the medical system has made many African Americans wary of tissue donation, contributing to donor shortages; in turn, only 17% of black patients awaiting an organ transplant got one in 2015, compared with about 30% of white patients.

https://time.com/5709294/first-african-american-face-transplant/?utm_source=linkedin&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=editorial&utm_term=health_health-care&linkId=80609130

Just amazing they're able to do this now. There's another clip at the website about another man that got one.

7 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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The First African American to Receive a Face Transplant. (Original Post) Bayard Jan 2020 OP
This hospital where I work is looking into this kind of surgery ismnotwasm Jan 2020 #1
Wow!! Just wow!! Duppers Jan 2020 #2
He looks really good now! lunatica Jan 2020 #3
I remember a Life magazine coming to our house Kittycow Jan 2020 #6
What a great article; well worth your time to read. Kittycow Jan 2020 #4
This is fantastic good news. But please add the word "Graphic" to your title Hekate Jan 2020 #5
Thank You..... lucca18 Jan 2020 #7

ismnotwasm

(41,998 posts)
1. This hospital where I work is looking into this kind of surgery
Wed Jan 15, 2020, 02:35 PM
Jan 2020

We already do intricate forms of plastic reconstruction, it’s exciting, life changing surgery

lunatica

(53,410 posts)
3. He looks really good now!
Wed Jan 15, 2020, 02:43 PM
Jan 2020

That seems to be an excellent transplant. He even has hair!

And good for him on insisting on a Black face! It’ll make it easier for those who come after him needing transplants. Once the doctors get these kinds of transplants to be more normal there will be plenty of patients who need them. They’ll be as good as any other kind of transplant.

I’m old enough to remember the first experimental heart transplant. What an uproar that caused! Now it’s completely accepted and many lives have been saved.

Kittycow

(2,396 posts)
6. I remember a Life magazine coming to our house
Wed Jan 15, 2020, 03:00 PM
Jan 2020

about the first heart transplant. (That and the one about the topless bathing suit )

Anyway, I looked it up and it turned out the patient died 18 days after surgery. Eventually a drug was discovered that handled the anti-rejection aspect well and transplant operations took off.

Hekate

(90,757 posts)
5. This is fantastic good news. But please add the word "Graphic" to your title
Wed Jan 15, 2020, 02:57 PM
Jan 2020

I was taken aback -- some might be a lot more than that.

I'm so very pleased for Mr Chelsea, and wish him a full recovery and long life.

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