Brayden Warnock-Hannon, who was badly burned in an accident
last year, and his mother, Angela Warnock.She says having a
plastic surgery service at Dunedin Hospital has been of
great benefit. Photo by Peter McIntosh.
Six-year-old Brayden Warnock-Hannon, who was badly burned
in an accident last year, is just one of thousands of patients
to benefit from the addition of a plastic surgery service at
Dunedin Hospital.
Since it was established three years ago, the service has
grown to take on another surgeon and now also treats patients
at Southland Hospital so they no longer have to travel to
Christchurch.
Brayden's mother, Angela Warnock, of Dunedin, said travelling
out of town for treatment was difficult and stressful for
families, without the support of other family and friends
around them.
Brayden, who was burned from the waist up after his T-shirt
caught fire on a stove element when he leaned over a pot of
cooking noodles, is likely to need continuing surgery for
years, and they were lucky to have the plastic surgery
service in Dunedin, Ms Warnock said.
Dunedin plastic and reconstructive surgeon Mr Patrick Lyall
said plastic surgery might be a discipline that did not often
save lives, but it could make a huge difference to quality of
life for patients.
While many people thought of cosmetic surgery when they
thought about plastic surgery, that was only a small
proportion of his work, which was mostly done in the private
sector, Mr Lyall said.
About half his work involved treatment of skin cancer and
melanoma, and burns victims.
The remaining 40% included congenital abnormalities, trauma,
in particular hand surgery, and reconstructing complicated
wounds, such as breast reconstruction following a mastectomy
or helping an orthopaedic surgeon "put a broken leg back
together".
"Performing breast reconstruction is not going to save
anybody's life, but it can make a tremendous difference to
how the patient feels about themselves.
"It is a terrible feeling to have cancer.
"It casts a shadow over someone's life.
"To have a physical reminder each time you get undressed can
really get to a person."
Plastic surgery was a discipline that came about "from
necessity" when thousands of young men began returning to the
United Kingdom with mutilating injuries suffered during World
War 1.
Surgeons learnt how to move tissue from one area of the body
to another and have it survive, enabling them to reconstruct
faces that had been horribly disfigured by bullet wounds.
While Dunedin's plastic surgery service is relatively new,
the city has a historic connection to this branch of surgery,
as two of the founders of modern plastic surgery were born in
the city.
The home where Sir Harold Delf Gillies - considered the
father of plastic surgery - was born looks down on Dunedin
Hospital, and in waiting rooms and wards around the hospital
Dr Lyall has discovered pictures of Sir Archibald McIndoe
operating in the United Kingdom, which had been painted by
his brother in 1945.
The pioneering surgery performed during both world wars
enabled soldiers, who could have become socially isolated, to
lead normal lives.
Mr Lyall works with fellow plastic and reconstructive surgeon
Mr William McMillan, who started with the service four months
ago.
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