The ‘guinea pigs’ who had face transplant surgery

进行面部移植手术的“豚鼠”

Today in Focus

2026-02-19

24 分钟
PDF

单集简介 ...

Face transplant patient Robert Chelsea and writer Fay Bound Alberti talk through the promise – and darker side – of this pioneering surgery. Help support our independent journalism at theguardian.com/infocus
更多

单集文稿 ...

  • This is The Guardian.

  • Today, the painful truth behind face transplant surgery.

  • Just as a heads up before we start,

  • today's episode does contain graphic details of surgery which some listeners might find distressing.

  • In 2019, Robert Chelsea made medical history.

  • A terrible car accident on a freeway in Los Angeles had left him with horrific burns.

  • Actually, it was worse than that.

  • His whole face was burnt off.

  • He spent 18 months in hospital and had multiple operations,

  • but still couldn't lead anything like a normal life.

  • The way I was eating for about six years is to syringe.

  • The idea of not being able to kiss your own daughter's cheeks is just tough, you know?

  • Going out in public became an ordeal.

  • A real boy, I guess he was like three or four years old, he looked at me and he froze.

  • I only ran straight to his dad and said, Daddy, Daddy, he looks like a zombie.

  • Doctors had reached their limits.

  • All the other specialists, they felt they couldn't do anything to help give me lips,

  • except make a flap that would cover my lips and protect my teeth and guns.

  • Then he was offered something that sounded like a miracle.

  • When I got the call, it was like 9.15 at night, and I had to get there the next morning.