Category Archives: Eye Surgery
It is one of the stranger reliable economic indicators: as the economy improves, so does the incidence of cosmetic surgery in the U.S. As NPR recently reported: The number of surgical procedures rose 2 percent to 1.58 million in 2011, … Continue reading →
I write frequently in this space about ethnic cosmetic surgery because of my abiding interest in the topic. As a Filipino-American, I am mindful of the many ways that politics, culture, and shifting standards of beauty inform the various nonwhite patients who visit my Los Angeles facial plastic surgery offices. Recently this NYT story caught my eye: titled “In South Korea, Plastic Surgery Comes Out of the Closet,” the article details the many ways that cosmetic surgery has taken Korea by storm.
The statistics are remarkable:
Cosmetic surgery is not covered by national health insurance, making it difficult to determine the exact size of the industry. A survey last year by the Seoul city government found that 31.5 percent of residents 15 or older were willing to undergo surgery to improve their looks. In 2007 the percentage was 21.5.
In a 2009 survey by the market research firm Trend Monitor, one of every five women in Seoul between the ages of 19 and 49 said they had undergone plastic surgery.
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