This book presents the development and results of a research study that examined the possible relationship between self-concept and anxiety in people who had suffered burn injuries. Throughout history it has become evident that such injuries compromise not only the physiology and general health of the person, but also their social, interpersonal, aesthetic, behavioral, and neurocognitive dimensions. The ultimate goal of this study is to contribute to the knowledge of such affectations, and in the future, to be reference material for those psychologists who need information about this problem, or for the general public, to understand the scope of this problem.