Making Sense Out of Bioethics
Plastic
Perfection: The Ethics of Breast
Implants

In the last 10 years, the number of women
undergoing breast augmentations has
increased dramatically. During 2007, nearly
half a million women opted for this form of
elective surgery. Many seem convinced that
breast implants are an easy way to shore up
their self-image. As one woman put it, “I
got implants so that I could gain back my
confidence and feel good about myself.” The
growing popularity of this kind of plastic
surgery, however, raises a constellation of
health concerns, ethical questions, and
personal/spiritual issues that may need to
be confronted whenever the temptation to
pursue elective breast augmentation arises.
As a general rule, there should be a
compelling
therapeutic
reason whenever we elect to undergo breast
augmentation, because surgery and anesthesia
always involve risks. Breast implant
surgery is not considered “therapeutic” in
the traditional sense, except for women who
have undergone a mastectomy, or otherwise
suffered significant breast damage, in which
case the procedure may indeed represent a
reconstructive or restorative therapy.
Implants, of course, are serious business ––
real surgery with real side effects and
strange things that can go wrong. Such
implants can rupture, have capsular
contractions, or develop leaks. Moreover,
they are clearly not a permanent solution.
They need to be replaced periodically. The
decision to get implants, particularly at an
early age, is an almost certain guarantee of
more surgeries later on.
Choosing to increase the size of otherwise
healthy breasts raises a number of
health-related concerns –– and ethical
concerns as well. Implants may increase
diagnostic difficulties associated with
doing mammograms. Some women report that
implants make self-examinations harder. In
the past, implants were often filled with
silicone, and when they would rupture, some
women developed immune conditions and health
problems which were attributed to the
release of silicone into their bodies.
Implants and implant surgery can also affect
the purpose and proper functioning of the
breast, by causing lactation insufficiency
and other complications associated with
breastfeeding.
Women who feel a strong need to augment
their breasts may also be struggling with
deeper personal and spiritual issues
regarding their own self-image. All of us
are keenly aware of the way that people
react to us when they first meet us, and
whenever they respond negatively to our
appearance, it can damage our self-esteem.
In our society, attractive people often end
up receiving preferential treatment, and
this seems especially true for women. The
result is a peculiar kind of pressure on
women: on the one hand, they are valued for
their beauty and feel compelled to conform
to the societal ideal. On the other hand,
elective breast augmentation seems to go too
far in an effort to meet that ideal. It
seems to cross an ethical line by saying
that women should alter their healthy bodies
in very radical ways in order to conform to
what is portrayed on television or in glossy
women’s magazines.
The escalating use of pornography among men
may also be contributing to this pressure to
conform to the digitally enhanced and
hyper-sexualized images of the computer
screen. As one woman put it, “If you have
friends who gossip about your flat chest,
you need new friends, not new breasts.” In
the face of so many disordered and
unreasonable pressures, undergoing an
augmentation may even be construed as a form
of unethical self-mutilation in the name of
some other perceived good.
A further difficulty is that such surgery
frequently does not address the real
self-mage problems that a woman may be
struggling with. Some who pursue this
so-called “plastic perfection” may be prone
to self-discontentment to begin with. Aiming
to make one’s body match up to an external,
visual measure of beauty can seem to open up
a new level of attention and affirmation
from others. But it can also lead to a
shallowness and an unhealthy self-focus.
I recall the story of a young man who got
seriously involved with body-building and
weight lifting. He worked many long months
to build up his muscle tone and bulk up his
physique by working out on various exercise
machines. Soon he realized that his focus
had become so intense that it had managed to
turn into a completely self-centered
behavior, so that whenever he would pass by
a mirror he couldn’t help flexing his
muscles to see whether they had gotten any
larger since the last time he checked. A
similar self-centeredness and vanity can
arise in the woman who focuses too much on
her figure or her profile.
After doing an augmentation, there can be a
“honeymoon period” where a woman may be
pleased with the outcome, following which
she can easily reset to a new baseline of
unease and discontent. She may need to get
yet another surgery, another shot, or
another treatment only to find that none of
it “fills the void.” It is always possible
to fixate on something else that needs
changing before we will allow ourselves to
feel good about who we are and to accept
what we have been given.
There is often something embarrassing,
perhaps even scandalous, in the realization
that women really want to do these elective
procedures. The psychological flaw here, one
might argue, is even uglier than any
perceived chest size “fl aw.” A negative
self-image can be very tough to overcome,
and implants too easily tempt with a kind of
false answer.
Ultimately, faulty notions of beauty are
likely to be at play as well in these
debates about breast implants. I think it
was Albert Einstein who remarked that beyond
what we perceive with our eyes, “there is
something that our mind cannot grasp and
whose beauty and sublimity reaches us only
indirectly.” The temptation to reduce
feminine beauty to a kind of plastic and
exterior measure is surely a failure to
realize how a woman’s physical beauty is
meant to be but a gentle hint, a pointer
towards an abiding beauty within.
Her outside image will have some
relationship to the woman she is andwants to
be, but that exterior image is necessarily
partial and incomplete, and should spur
every woman to pursue and develop that
deeper feminine beauty and virtue that is
properly found within.
Father Tadeusz Pacholczyk,
Ph.D. earned his doctorate
in neuroscience from Yale and did
post-doctoral work at Harvard. He is a
priest of the diocese of Fall River, MA, and
serves as the Director of Education at The
National Catholic Bioethics Center in
Philadelphia. See
www.ncbcenter.org