I’ll show you the tits.

In Europe and America, breast rehabilitation has been included in health insurance, as a result of which there has been a significant increase in breast rehabilitation in the United States, which now accounts for more than 50 per cent of breast-cutting patients. In my country, breast rehabilitation is now entirely self-financed, with general reconstruction costs of approximately $20,000-$50,000.Breast rehabilitation, or “mammography”, refers to surgery to help those who have lost their breasts to recreate a new breast. At present, there are three ways to re-establish breasts: prosthetic implantation, self-pump re-establishment (including re-embracing of the back of the skin, re-embracing of the abdomen, re-embracing of the abdominal veins, re-embracing of the skins of the abdominal walls, and, less rare, re-embracing of the hips of the pedals, etc.) and self-restructuring of joint prosthesis. In the form of surgery, breast rehabilitation is divided into immediate and extended reconstruction. Immediate rehabilitation refers to the completion of breast rehabilitation at the same time as breast removal. That is to say, the breast is rebuilt immediately after the breast cancer plaster and the surgical treatment takes place simultaneously. At present, most breast cancer patients are able to start reconstruction work at the same time as they have been surgically excised, with the end of one operation and the completion of breast mutilation and breast rehabilitation. In addition, some patients can retain breast and nipples when they have their breasts removed, which can be less difficult and time-consuming to rebuild. The benefit of immediate reconstruction is that patients are not psychologically deprived of their breasts, and that the recovered breast looks good. At the same time, the immediate re-establishment of breast residual tissues is very adaptive and allows maximum retention of the aesthetic elements of the mammography to achieve optimal aesthetic effects. The disadvantage lies in the fact that, as a result of the remaking of a breast, there may be some degree of asymmetry with the original breast during the process, as well as in the fact that there may be complications in the reconstruction process, with recovery taking a relatively longer time than normal breast-cutting. Post-rehabilitation is usually carried out after breast cancer (usually after 1 year of operation or after 6 months to 1 year of treatment). Surgery is more difficult than immediate reconstruction, and often requires several separate operations. It takes three to six months to make nipples and six months to tattoo them to make them come true, a process that often takes about a year. At present, there is an increasing number of patients requesting breast rehabilitation. Director Forphein had an old patient who often wrote to her before he could rebuild her breasts, saying that she hadn’t been out for three or four years and felt that she was always staring at her breasts. Later, after the breast was rebuilt, confidence increased and there were photographs of her traveling or her sisters at the party in the community of friends, with a completely different mindset. The disadvantage of the delay is that patients experience several years of breast loss and the trauma of re-operative surgery. The benefits of prolonged reconstruction could avoid the adverse effects of therapeutic treatment on breast rehabilitation. Breast rehabilitation, “more than bad”. First, for women who have breast cancer, having a full breast is like having a “second life”, psychologically, they can be relieved by the low self-esteem, anxiety and depression of having lost their breasts; and biologically, they can increase the quality of life of the couple. In the long term, both marriage and family well-being are beneficial. Second, breast rehabilitation does not lead to the recurrence of breast cancer, as everyone fears, nor does it affect the follow-up to therapeutic and chemotherapy.