Victims' Realities
Victims of a dog attacks that requires emergency room care and if the dog owner is not covered by a homeowner policy, you may have to pay your own medical bill.  The cost to you could range from $2,000 to $40,000+ depending upon the severity of the attack and the required stay at the hospital. 

After care is another reality.  If you do have Health Insurance, they may not cover for plastic surgeries as they are considered “elective.”   And if you have no insurance…well victims are left on their own to finance.  Many need as many as 5 – 10 surgeries.  Victims are often left so mangled they refuse to leave their homes.  Many never seek psychological care as they are reminded it was “just a dog.”  Jennifer Lowe Foundation will change this.

Returning to a normal life is nearly impossible.  Victims no longer visit family and friends in their homes in a trusting way.  Being in public places is so traumatic they just prefer to wait in the car.  Many cannot even look at a dog and being around small ones can give them panic attacks.  We must find people the help they need.  Psychiatric care is often a necessity.   But the means to pay for it is not available to many. 

The following images may be considered graphic by some viewers. Please click on the following links with caution.

Dog Attack Victim
Hoff Attack
Rottweiler Attack
Bite Injury
Arm Injury


The following images may be considered graphic by some readers. Please click on the following links with caution.
After the Attack
After the Attack
Post-op
After the Transplant
 
This is Isabelle Dinoire, she received the world’s 1st face transplant. This is her story.

Face patient wants 'normal life'
Isabelle Dinoire said her operation "could help others to live again."

MIENS, France (CNN) -- The woman who received the world's first partial face transplant thanked her doctors as she stepped before the media for the first time since the groundbreaking surgery.
"I hope the successful operation will help other people like me to live again," said Isabelle Dinoire, 38, who was disfigured when she was attacked by her pet Labrador retriever.
"I now have a face like everyone else," she told reporters Monday at the hospital in Amiens in northern France where the surgery was performed. "A door to the future is opening."
Her speech was heavily slurred and hard to understand, and she appeared to have difficulty moving or closing her mouth.
But the divorced mother of two teenage daughters told how a dog bite left her disfigured, and she thanked the family of the donor who gave her new lips, a chin and nose.
Fine scar lines could be seen from her nose over her cheekbones down to her jaw where the tissue was attached in a 15-hour operation on November 27.
"I can open my mouth and eat. I feel my lips, my nose and my mouth," she said.
During the news conference, while one of her surgeons was speaking, she lifted a cup to her lips and appeared to drink.
"I want to resume a normal life," Dinoire said. "I pay homage to the donor's family. ... My operation could help others to live again."
She said that she was wrestling with personal problems at the time, had had a trying week, and "took some drugs to forget," which knocked her out, The Associated Press quoted her as saying.
Dinoire said she was passed out when the dog bit her and that she didn't realize the extent of her injuries when she awoke.
"I tried to light a cigarette, and I didn't understand why I couldn't hold it between my lips," she said.
"I looked in the mirror. I was horrified."
With her wounds worsening, she was barely able to eat or speak. She said she accepted the idea of the transplant "immediately" and then waited six months for a suitable donor.
The donor tissue came from a female suicide victim who had been declared brain dead, doctors said.
Dinoire also spoke of the difficulties of life with disfigurement, saying she suffered stares when she went out.
"I understand all people who have a handicap," she said.
The procedure has been unable to restore the way she looked before the dog bit her.
"There's no comparison between the face I have today and the face I had seven months ago, it is totally different," she said.

No reservations
The surgery is believed to be the first of its kind. While the technology to perform it has been available for some time, ethical concerns have delayed the implementation of such procedures.
But doctors in this case said they had no reservations about what they did. The procedure went smoothly and four hours after surgery blood was circulating in the donor graft.
"When you saw this person's face, how severely disfigured, you'll understand why we had to take this challenge," transplant surgeon Dr. Jean-Michel Deubernard said.
Dinoire is still undergoing a strict regimen of immunosuppression therapy so her body doesn't reject the donor skin, a problem that has been encountered in other skin transplants, the doctors said.
She is also being monitored and aided by a team of psychologists, they said.
"She is doing well, she is normal, normal except maybe a little insensitivity (on her face)," face transplant surgeon Dr. Bernard Devauchelle said.
According to People magazine, Dinoire has been eating strawberries and chocolate cake to try to regain the weight she lost. To her doctors' dismay, however, she has once again taken up smoking.
She has been shuttling between Amiens and the southeast city of Lyon, where she receives further treatment.
While the surgeons have appeared in public previously, until Monday they kept Dinoire away from the cameras and in the hospital as much as possible.
But now they say she is ready to get on with her life and there is no medical reason for her to remain hospitalized.
When she does go home, it will be to even more publicity -- and money. According to one report, she has signed agreements worth nearly $1 million for a book, a documentary and a feature film about her story.
In the United States, doctors at the Cleveland Clinic in Ohio are screening patients for a potential full face transplant, an official there said.
The clinic is the only U.S. institution that has the approval of its internal review board to do the procedure.
Such an operation would be conducted only on severely disfigured patients, the official said, most likely on burn victims, because those patients usually still have their bone structure and musculature in place.
The procedure should not be considered elective, the official said.


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