Guest guest Posted March 3, 2005 Report Share Posted March 3, 2005 Thought I'd share with the group a research paper forwarded to me by our Helen W... who was interviewed by these students ... Thanks Helen and Rogene and Dawn for helping educate these college students! With love to all. Ilena Rosenthal www.BreastImplantAwareness.org Dammen Sarina Chen Journalism 48J:007 10 December 2004 For Helen For my third research paper, I chose to continue researching cosmetic surgery. However, once I began searching for a group to post my questions to I narrowed my topic down slightly. I didn't find a site that talked about all different kinds of cosmetic surgery; however, I did find an excellent group that talked about breast implants—alt.support.breast-implant. This group was very active and every day there were over twenty-five new postings. Sometimes there were even forty to fifty. I observed this group four times before I posted. I also received an email from Dawn, " a survivor " of breast implants. Another woman, Rogene emailed me and like Dawn, she invited me to join her own group at another website. The fourth woman that contacted me, Helen, is the woman that I will be basing the following paper on. Helen served as my ultimate source for information. Many of the women in this group felt that their breast implants were the source to all of their health ailments. Many of them were sick from the silicone or saline placed in their bodies. It was very sad to see the amount of women affected every day by breast implants. In the following paragraphs, I will share with you Helen's story and her responses to my interview questions. I feel that it is important to hear her story first to completely understand her responses to my questions. Considering that Helen was the only person willing to talk personally with me, I adapted my questions specifically for Helen. The time spent emailing Helen back and forth and talking to her on the phone has forever changed my views on breast implants and on life in general. At age 20, Helen experienced her first breast tumor. In 1973, after nine breast tumors, the last being pre-cancerous Helen decided to have what today we would call " reconstructive surgery. " Due to her breast tumors, Helen had lost both of her breasts to mastectomies. At that time, no one under 40 could have mammograms done. Helen's surgeon mentioned that he had heard of something new for people like her. He explained that he would not do the surgery for cosmetic reasons and that she would be no bigger. In 1973, Helen underwent her first silicone implants after a bi-lateral mastectomy, which placed the silicone above her muscles. She recalls having to wear a device for some time to keep them in place. From the beginning they were hard and painful. When she asked him about the pain, he felt that it was because they were directly on nerve endings. Helen was very thin and remembers feeling stretched-out from the implants. Following her augmentation, Helen was sick on and off for many years, and her mother was convinced that the implants were the source of all her ailments. For many years, Helen struggled on and off with different health problems. In 1985, she underwent a hysterectomy and almost died again. Another doctor found that Helen was experiencing immune deficiency. However, Helen continued to live every single day with health problems that arose from unknown causes. Twenty years had passed since the implants, yet Helen's health condition continued to remain fragile. In 1996, Helen saw her first plastic surgeon. In September of '96, Helen was scheduled for surgery. This surgery initially required two doctors; however, one of the doctors was late so the other doctor went ahead on his own. He informed her that her skin was very thin and that the implants could be stuck to her chest cavity, but he said he could fix this all later. She explained years later that this is their key—they can always fix things later with more surgery. They proceeded to remove her breast implants and did get them out in one piece. However, following the surgery Helen had to return home with drain tubes in place due to the infection caused by the implants. Her doctor explained that while the reports for cancer were negative, they was a hodge-podge of other substances within her breasts that could turn cancerous. In November of '96, Helen was sent to yet another general surgeon. However, this surgeon was a woman. This surgeon did a complete mastectomy bi-laterally. Her silicone, however, was replaced by saline. Helen explains that at that time she had no idea that saline would cause her ailments as well. Years later, she explained that considering that saline only has a shelf-life of one year imagine putting that into your body. Following this mastectomy, Helen continued to be sick and experience extreme pain. She had three to four surgeries in the office because she reopened and got infected. Her doctor, who was a complete perfectionist, continued to be frustrated with her because he had no control over her situation. Helen recalls feeling that her experience probably humbled this surgeon, considering he had never had problems before her. In January, a surgeon filled her expanders (implants) with saline. Helen remembers that he made them too big. She never wanted breasts that big—that is their mentality. The labs following this surgery did show silicone throughout her body. Her implants were ruptured and leaking into her body. A lung scan also showed silicone in her right lung. Following this, the surgeon decided to take these implants out and replace them—this only ending in Helen rushing to the emergency room with leakage. It was following this that her surgeon left Iowa. She believes that he left because he was such a perfectionist and could not deal with her. He simply could not fix her. She was then passed on to a younger surgeon. She explained that she was not ready to go through life deformed and she kept her hope up. From September 1996 to May 1997, Helen had undergone eleven surgeries! She had pain in her joints and other severe ailments, yet no one knew what was causing all of these problems. In June '98, she was still not ready to give up. She underwent a tram flap on the right side, which is where they take muscle from the stomach and pull it through the breast area to make a breast. This too did not work. By the time she left the hospital some of the tram flap was dying and he had to take away the dead tissue and fix the incisions. She also underwent another procedure to try and fix her breasts. However, she had three or four surgeries following this to try to fix places. Today, her left breast looks somewhat like a mound and her right breast is virtually gone—all because of these surgeries. Today, Helen is very sick with rheumatoid arthritis, immune deficiency, osteoarthritis, MGUS, and osteoporosis. Helen also lost all of her teeth due to the immune deficiency. All of this was caused from the silicone. She has very little life and feels that no one really understands or is empathetic. She does work every day at the nursing home and to do this she comes home every night at 6 to go to bed. She says that her husband has been at her side and supportive but she wonders each day when he might tire of all this. It was following this story that I contacted Helen via telephone. She trusted me enough to email me her story and left me her phone number to contact her if I felt the need. I immediately emailed her back and asked her when I could contact her. Through her story, Helen became " real " to me. She was no longer someone I just wanted to talk to about research questions; I wanted to know her and her story. I contacted her December 9, 2004 at around 7:30 p.m. The following questions are going to be listed in interview format as I feel that it will allow people to see Helen as a person and not as just a respondent. The following questions and answers are all very real and educational: S: So you had implants for reconstructive purposes? H: Yes, my tumors started when I was 20 years old. All together I had nine breast tumors, which eventually led to a mastectomy. S: So silicone is throughout your entire body? H: Silicone is throughout my body. A lung x-ray even showed it in my lungs. S: In all how many surgeries have you had? H: Since the first breast implants many—bilateral biopsy, hysterectomy, lattimus flap, tram flap, gall bladder, etc. S: I remember you saying that the doctors insinuated that you wanted larger breasts and you said that size was not the issue. They ultimately assumed you wanted them big. What are your comments on this? H: The first time in 1973, the general surgeon didn't say that they were for size. Plastic surgeons, however, feel that everyone wants to be bigger. That is their mentality. S: You mentioned that as long as they get the money the doctors don't care. Do you feel that they treated you as a human or as an object? H: I felt that they treated me as an object. One surgeon was even late. They just cut straight across and you're mutilated. They don't understand. You stand there naked and they take pictures—it's humiliating. They don't tell you everything either. They won't even admit now that implants cause these problems. Plastic surgeons are cocky and don't get along. They're all too competitive. S: Do you feel that the cosmetic surgeries today take the uniqueness away from natural beauty? H: Yes, because some of the things they do end up looking like plastic. Look at —he doesn't even have a nose left. S: Do you feel it's beneficial for men and women to alter their bodies cosmetically for superficial reasons? Why or why not? H: I don't like to judge anybody, but I didn't want to go for cosmetic reasons. I believe, though, that it's becoming an epidemic. For instant beauty they will pay dearly. S: What do you think your life would be like now if you had never had the implants? H: I would probably be healthier, but I can't change it now. S: What are you thoughts on men surgeons vs. women surgeons? H: They need more women in the practice. Women care and relate more. If I had had a woman sew me up there wouldn't have been these scars. Most doctors cut straight across. You're mutilated. S: If you could tell young women that are getting or have implants one thing, what would it be and why? H: Really look into yourself and find your inner beauty. Look to the future—ten years from now you're not going to look the same. For instant beauty they will pay dearly. For young girls, it's momentary beauty. They're not thinking down the road. S: Lastly, Helen, you never quit. You must be a very strong woman. How do you keep going? H: Besides my health I went through a divorce after 28 years of marriage. Each thing makes you stronger. You cannot just dwell on the implants because sometimes there is nothing anyone can do for you.. Following these questions, Helen and I talked for awhile. I found out that she is an activity events coordinator at a nursing home. Despite her own ailments, Helen finds the time to give back to other people every day. She strives to help the elderly feel human. Like me, Helen feels that often times the elderly are forgotten. They sit around all day with no reason to live. Every day Helen finds the time to give to the elderly. Helen is one of the strongest women I have ever met, even if it was just on the telephone. Talking to her reminded me of myself, and I truly believe that Helen has changed my life. Going back to our original assignment of conducting online interviews, I feel that I was successful finding respondents. However, besides Helen, most of the people wanted me to engage in their own personal groups. I feel that Helen, however, wanted to share her story with me to make it real to me. So many times you can interview online and get synthetic responses. From Helen, I got authentic responses. My experience overall was rewarding and beneficial. It also touched me very much on a personal level. Helen is not someone that I will soon forget. Even though she is the only one that chose to personally share her story with me, I feel my experience with online groups has been rewarding. Helen struggles every single day to live a normal life, yet she still finds time to make other less fortunate people feel needed and loved. She does it because it makes these people as well as herself feel good. Helen truly is a strong, courageous woman that people could learn a thing or two from. Sometimes it only takes a stranger to touch your life for a moment to change your life forever. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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