Authors
Carlota Gimenez Lynch, Kate Miller, Seth Thaller
Published in
The Journal of craniofacial surgery. Jun 26, 2026. Epub Jun 26, 2026.
Abstract
Social media platforms are widely utilized by minors, whose behaviors and attitudes become influenced by the content which they vociferously consume in these networks. Growing evidence associates social media usage with negative psychosocial impact and increased consideration of surgical intervention among pediatric patients. This phenomenon complicates clinical ethical decision-making in pediatric plastic and reconstructive surgery.
A narrative review was conducted to examine the intersection of social media, self-image, intervention trends, and ethics relevant to pediatric plastic surgery patients. A structured literature search was performed using PubMed and Embase for articles published between 2016 and 2026. The authors used terms related to social media, body image, cosmetic surgery, and pediatric or adolescent populations. Qualitative narrative synthesis was used due to the heterogeneity of study designs and outcomes.
Current literature suggests that social media influences adolescent self-esteem, identity development, and body dissatisfaction. This then leads to their interest in seeking aesthetic intervention through comparison behaviors, cyberbullying, validation-seeking, and exposure to idealized beauty standards. These platforms may also normalize cosmetic procedures and contribute to unrealistic expectations in patients and caregivers. Findings raise ethical considerations in autonomy, beneficence, nonmaleficence, and justice in plastic surgery practice. Ethical management requires careful assessment of social media influence on motivations, patient maturity, psychological vulnerability, body dysmorphic disorder risk, and developmental appropriateness.
As social media continues to shape adolescent identity and aesthetic expectations, pediatric plastic surgeons must integrate psychosocial evaluation, ethical reflection, and developmentally appropriate counseling into clinical decision-making. This will assist in ensuring that any proposed surgical or noninvasive aesthetic intervention serves overall patient well-being instead of transient digital pressures.
PMID:
42359517
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 26 Jun 2026.
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