Hi Ryno,
The medically important items give a perspective that isn't gained when some body is working from the illusion of physical "perfection" of some ideal type. At 14 I would have loved to have them removed. At 20 when I started dating the school nudist club founder they downgraded a lot. At 24 when my life was changed they totally ceased to matter. I'm not a teenager any more, in body or mind. It appears that only 5000-6000 annually in the USA of the estimated 2,000,000-3,000,000 new case of gyne each year
After being in group healthcare for the past few decades and having to evaluate groups for the percentage of dissatisfaction with providers for all reasons including surgeries, reporting on the number of complications such as acquired infections and their costs in damage, kilo-deaths and dollars; medication mistakes in hospital causing kilo-deaths, anesthesia shock killing a friend, botched minor surgery nearly killing my father and the callous incompetent treatment by the doctors and hospital system where it was originally done you couldn't pay me enough to have any unnecessary surgery. If I was going to do cosmetic surgery I have a whole body's worth that would need doing so I would end up with a patchwork quilt of a skin so that when fully dressed there is the illusion of an "attractive" body. I'm a nudist. The illusion is gone without clothing. My body is what it is. The people that it bothers is their problem, not mine.
Yes, I had a colonoscopy quite aware of the rate of intestinal perforations and everything else that could go wrong. It saves lives and cuts misery. From the managed care end of things there are plenty of statistics showing how much more dangerous over-treatment is compared to under-treatment. I had my gall bladder out 10 years ago. It took them 2 + hours to intubate me. The entire surgery took over 5 hours. Who says nothing ever goes wrong? And these were truly trivial things going wrong. They cut me for endoscopic surgery then they had to do it for the traditional surgery too and to show their good will only charged for the more expensive of the procedures instead of two complete sets of charges. Then they sewed up my belly button at a weird angle and enclosed some hairs in the main incision. My tonsillectomy wasn't so great either, even for the early 50s time line.
Then my partner had a bikini line incision for an hysterectomy. When all was said and done there were two incisions a quarter inch apart, the shorter higher one not completed, so the first cut was a clumsy misplacement. There are hairs also sewn in making it impossible for her to have a non bristly smooth shave job. She is a nudist too, and she has 2 scars for the price of one surgery. I know that a plastic surgeon such as we have here would never be that clumsy. I know, we should have warned them that we were nudists and that their work was going to be on display for all to see. I guess we could get tattoos of "scars by Dr XXXX". Seriously though, I suppose I just expected that they would perform with the same professional attention to all detail and perfection with which I approach system design and programming.
Expectations are a bitch. Am I pleased that neither of us had any serious complication or incompetence. YES! However, as one sister is a hospital administrator, another a pediatrician, my father a pioneer in the HMO field and consultant, and we all had various degrees of imperfection, mine the most minor, are we cursed as a family or is this what surgeons do when they are being careful for somebody in the business? How do people not in the business get treated? My partner's 2 level neck fusion was an example of total perfection fortunately. I worked to find the best in the business.