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  • Plastic surgery has been booming in the past decade.

  • Pop culture and social media helped to influence a new generation of people being proud and transparent

  • about cosmetic enhancements.

  • But in 2020, things took a dip.

  • Hospitals and centers closed, staff members were laid off and elective surgeries came to a halt.

  • However, the plastic surgery industry bounced back strong.

  • What we found after the moratorium on elective surgeries ended was that there was a pent up

  • demand for cosmetic procedures, which people did fulfill.

  • The government put money into the economy so that it remained strong, people had disposable income, and

  • they still used it for cosmetic procedures.

  • Americans working from home spent hours and hours watching themselves on

  • camera, endlessly scrolling on social media and experiencing inevitable downtime from work

  • and social events.

  • This all but benefited the plastic surgery industry, which saw a record number of patients as pandemic

  • restrictions were lifted.

  • I think most plastic surgeons thought, "Oh my God, it's really over because people are going to have a

  • very difficult time really worrying about plastic surgery when they have this epidemic, pandemic

  • happening, but it ended up being the complete opposite.

  • So just how long will the plastic surgery boom last?

  • And with a new normal taking shape, what does the future look like for the industry?

  • Born in Virginia in 1787, Dr.

  • John Peter Mettauer is widely recognized as America's first plastic surgeon.

  • But it was World War I that catapulted the plastic surgery industry into new realms.

  • Extensive face and head injuries from war required physicians to innovate, while advances in blood

  • transfusions, anesthesia and antiseptics allowed doctors to experiment with new techniques.

  • By the 1960s, plastic surgery for purely cosmetic purposes was becoming more common.

  • Procedures that were originally designed as medical treatments saw an uptick in patients getting them to

  • enhance their appearance.

  • For example, Botox was first approved by the FDA as a treatment for crossed eyes, but doctors

  • soon realized those injection areas didn't have wrinkles.

  • Not only are we reconstructing function of the face and body, but now we're also helping to

  • bolster confidence by doing cosmetic procedures, which means sometimes restoring things the way they

  • were. A youthful appearance is associated more with being energetic and virile and

  • capable, and for many of us, that's very important in our day to day affairs.

  • As Baby Boomers began to age, they wanted to appear younger and cosmetic procedures outpaced

  • reconstructive ones.

  • The 90s was also an era where doctors fought hard to dismantle the stigma that was associated with plastic

  • surgery. There was a growing public perception amid some sensationalized stories that these

  • surgeries were high risk.

  • And in 1992, the FDA issued a moratorium on silicone breast implants following

  • growing fears that the implants were unsafe.

  • I am asking that physicians cease using silicone gel implants.

  • But things soon took a turn, including health care reform.

  • After extensive lobbying in 1998, President Bill Clinton signed a bill into law,

  • allowing reconstructive surgery to be covered by health insurance.

  • And by 2005, cosmetic procedures almost doubled over reconstructive ones.

  • In 2020 over 24 million cosmetic procedures were performed worldwide.

  • But it was the U.S.

  • that had the highest number of both surgical and non-surgical treatments, leading the way with over

  • 4,600,000 procedures.

  • Brazil comes in second, often serving as a destination for hopeful plastic surgery candidates

  • around the globe. They are three different categories when it comes to cosmetic plastic surgery.

  • There are surgical procedures, noninvasive type procedures, and then there are injectables and

  • fillers. The most common plastic surgery performed in the U.S.

  • is breast augmentation, followed by liposuction and eyelid surgery.

  • Botox was the number one non-surgical procedure worldwide.

  • Although plastic surgery, like any surgery, carries risks.

  • The vast majority of patients in the U.S.

  • are satisfied with their results.

  • In 2019 98 percent of those who got breast augmentation and 97 percent of those who got a tummy

  • tuck said they'd do it again.

  • I am ecstatic with my results.

  • I'm still projected to see the final result a few more months from now, but my surgeon and the

  • team had said that I'm healing great.

  • I'm happy with it. I haven't had any issues.

  • Plastic surgery is a hefty investment.

  • The average cost of breast augmentation is $4,789.

  • And Americans pay on average $7,944 for a facelift.

  • You get what you pay for.

  • It is an investment.

  • You don't want to go to the lowest common denominator.

  • You really want to go to someone who's talented in what they do and how they do it.

  • Cost barriers do motivate many to travel to other parts of the country or even the world in order to

  • save money on their dream procedure.

  • But that isn't always the best route.

  • Plastic surgeries can go horribly wrong, as seen on the reality TV show 'Botched.' A

  • 2018 study found that .78 percent of plastic surgeries have complications, including

  • infection, pulmonary embolism and organ damage.

  • Definitely, medical tourism in plastic surgery was, not as much post-COVID,

  • before COVID, was a big industry.

  • And unfortunately, just like everything else, there are great surgeons abroad and there are bad

  • surgeons abroad. As there are great surgeons in Los Angeles and there's some

  • surgeons that aren't so great.

  • But the problem is if complications arise.

  • Going under the knife has always carried some sort of stigma.

  • Many celebrities, including Kylie Jenner, Tyra Banks and Lady Gaga, notoriously spoke out against

  • plastic surgery and later came clean about getting some cosmetic work done.

  • I think that the taboo for plastic surgery has often been that it's seen as something that is

  • unnecessary or, say, cosmetic surgery seen as unnecessary.

  • We've also seen cosmetic surgery as showing signs of insecurity, so that if you are doing cosmetic

  • surgery to completely change your appearance, your appearance is part of your identity.

  • So I think part of the taboo has been a rejection of identity because you're pursuing cosmetic surgery.

  • But a few things have changed the negative perception of cosmetic treatments, namely pop culture and

  • social media. What was once seen as a denial of self, shifted into a popular and accepted trend for

  • everyday people.

  • People see themselves in a photograph on Instagram.

  • They can filter their appearances and they see what they like as a change.

  • So they could also image themselves to come up with a look that they think

  • reflects themselves.

  • And so they'll come and ask us if we can help them achieve that.

  • But I think with social media filters that come through social media, people, seeing their

  • friends and seeing people that they admire morphed and trying to

  • emulate that to some degree.

  • So that's how social media has changed.

  • It has become more acceptable.

  • Another thing helping to change the narrative around aesthetic procedures is the introduction of ethnic

  • plastic surgery.

  • The 90s and early 2000s was an era of extreme plastic surgery transformations, often leading

  • to a lot of criticism aimed at the patient.

  • Doctors now say the key to a successful procedure is subtle changes while maintaining the

  • patient's ethnic identity.

  • I do feel that cosmetic procedures because it's done for personal reasons, not necessarily

  • done for attention or fame, or to be an Instagram influencer, but done for

  • personal reasons that it should be somewhat discreet and that the results that we give should look

  • natural and look congruent with the ethnicity, to not be extremely dramatic unless

  • necessary, but usually subtle.

  • The plastic surgery boom has also coincided with society's new emphasis on wellness.

  • Today, more Americans are focusing on self-care and the needs of the individual.

  • I think women are understanding that, that their desire to have cosmetic

  • surgery doesn't mean they don't like who they are or feel more comfortable saying, "This is what I've done

  • to make myself feel better.

  • This is what I've done to make myself look better, more refreshed and more like my old self." And that's

  • certainly something to be proud of when you've taken ownership of your appearance.

  • The Covid-19 pandemic shook the industry.

  • The total number of cosmetic procedures decreased by 1.8 percent in 2020 compared to

  • 2019, but that's mainly due to hospital and center closures, not demand.

  • Our schedule has never been this busy.

  • There's not enough time in the day to do all the surgeries and procedures that our patients are

  • requesting.

  • Experts point to a phenomenon called the 'Zoom effect' or the 'Zoom boom.' Covid limitations

  • shifted in-person meetings and social events to video calls, meaning more people became

  • hyper-critical of their facial features.

  • That dissatisfaction led to a much higher interest in plastic surgery above-the-shoulder.

  • When people were doing Zooms all the time, they really focus on their face because that's what they

  • see, the reflection of Zoom and Facetime and constantly looking

  • back at yourself, you start looking and finding flaws.

  • Or maybe there are issues that you were concerned with for forever and now it's coming out.

  • So facial, nasal and eyelid surgery has been tremendously

  • on the uptick.

  • According to a study by ASPS, 11 percent of women surveyed said they were more interested in

  • cosmetic procedures a year into the pandemic than they were prior to it.

  • That number goes up to 25 percent for women who've already had a procedure.

  • Some patients are motivated by the down time spent at home.

  • An increase in work-from-home policies across U.S.

  • employers allows patients to fully recover at home while saving PTO.

  • Others are motivated by the ability to recover in plain sight.

  • More and more people are getting procedures done on features that are covered by their mask.

  • However, the opposite is also having a moment.

  • Doctors say they're seeing more patients getting work done above-the-nose, since those features are

  • highlighted when wearing a mask.

  • Another big influence due to Covid?

  • Finances.

  • I was able to finance my procedure through the savings that I acquired working from home during the

  • pandemic and also did use a credit card to finance.

  • I think I would have needed to wait a little longer to get the procedure done if I had not saved as

  • much as I had up until that point working from home.

  • I was in a better position to pay any additional costs.

  • Doctors say the future of plastic surgery is plastic surgery.

  • And some of the changes the industry has seen are here to stay.

  • Some of the things that have changed about how we offer plastic surgery for us.

  • We certainly are offering more virtual consoles and those will remain.

  • And so access to the plastic surgery will probably remain to be more convenient.

  • We also created more office space procedures for convenience and also

  • for patient safety, and I think that also will remain and that the way we access plastic

  • surgery will be different and that the demand for plastic surgery in the setting of people who are

  • still working, even if they're working virtual, that the recovery times need to be less dramatic and

  • shorter. I think that probably won't change.

  • And with cosmetic treatments becoming more advanced, more affordable and less taboo, the

  • Covid-19 boom is just the beginning.

Plastic surgery has been booming in the past decade.

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Why Plastic Surgery Is On The Rise

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    joey joey に公開 2022 年 02 月 08 日
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