Reconstruction after Burns: Where Surgery Meets Psychological Healing

Sara Karti *

National Burn Center and Plastic Surgery Department, IBN Rochd University Hospital Casablanca, Morocco.

Meryem Katif

National Burn Center and Plastic Surgery Department, IBN Rochd University Hospital Casablanca, Morocco.

Chaimaa El Moustakim

National Burn Center and Plastic Surgery Department, IBN Rochd University Hospital Casablanca, Morocco.

Marouane Habla

National Burn Center and Plastic Surgery Department, IBN Rochd University Hospital Casablanca, Morocco.

El Harti Amine

National Burn Center and Plastic Surgery Department, IBN Rochd University Hospital Casablanca, Morocco.

Mounia Diouri

National Burn Center and Plastic Surgery Department, IBN Rochd University Hospital Casablanca, Morocco.

*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.


Abstract

Burn injuries represent among the most devastating forms of physical trauma, leaving survivors to navigate complex trajectories of surgical reconstruction, functional rehabilitation, and profound psychological adaptation. This critical review examines the convergence of reconstructive surgical practice and psychological healing in burn care, synthesising evidence published between 2010 and present. The review draws on literature spanning plastic and reconstructive surgery, clinical psychology, psychiatry, rehabilitation medicine, and health-related quality of life research to interrogate how physical restoration and mental health interact, reinforce, and sometimes conflict with one another throughout the recovery continuum. Key surgical modalities—including skin grafting, flap reconstruction, tissue expansion, and laser therapies—are evaluated alongside their documented psychological correlates, with particular attention to post-traumatic stress disorder, depression, body image disturbance, and chronic pain. The review critically appraises multidisciplinary care frameworks, psychosocial screening tools validated in burn populations, and the emerging role of psychological interventions such as cognitive behavioural therapy, acceptance and commitment therapy, and virtual reality-based treatments. Disparities in access to integrated care across high-income and low- and middle-income country contexts are examined, as are special considerations pertaining to paediatric survivors and individuals with large total body surface area injuries. The evidence collectively supports the position that surgical and psychological components of burn recovery are not sequential but deeply interdependent, and that care models failing to account for this interdependence generate measurable deficits in long-term patient outcomes. The review concludes by identifying critical gaps in the literature and proposing directions for future integrated research.

Keywords: Burn reconstruction, psychological rehabilitation, post-traumatic stress disorder, body image, multidisciplinary burn care, skin grafting, health-related quality of life, scar management


How to Cite

Karti, Sara, Meryem Katif, Chaimaa El Moustakim, Marouane Habla, El Harti Amine, and Mounia Diouri. 2026. “Reconstruction After Burns: Where Surgery Meets Psychological Healing”. International Neuropsychiatric Disease Journal 23 (4):18-37. https://doi.org/10.9734/indj/2026/v23i4565.

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