Friday, September 30, 2011

North Valley Plastic Surgery Announces New Website For Spanish Speaking Patients - YAHOO!

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Vibrant Nation Cosmetic Procedures Guide provides expert advice and options for women over 50 - PRLog (free press release)

PRLog (Press Release) - Sep 30, 2011 - Have plastic surgery statistics scared you into believing there?s no good plastic surgery? Cosmetic surgery is only one of the many ways women over 50 take care of themselves every day, but the fact is that cosmetic surgery - good cosmetic surgery - can be a very effective path to looking good and feeling good.

Plastic surgery statistics, however, tell us that there are significant risks and that we need to understand exactly what will happen before and after plastic surgery. Cost, recovery time, type of anesthesia, and many other factors must be considered to make the best possible choice.

Now you can discover accurate and trustworthy information about what you can expect before and after choosing plastic surgery from women like you. Arm yourself with the information you need so you won?t feel you?re heading to the surgeon?s office blindly.
VibrantNation.com has teamed up with nationally recognized cosmetic surgery consultant and author Wendy Lewis to bring you Cosmetic Procedures and Plastic Surgery After 50: Expert Advice for Choosing the Best Option for You.

In this guide, Ms. Lewis shares - in plain English - everything you need to know about cosmetic procedures you may be considering. Whether you're talking about eyelid lift surgery, breast reduction and lift, face lift costs, or liposculpture, she offers expert advice for choosing the best cosmetic procedures and plastic surgery options for you.

Wendy Lewis, also known by her trademark The Knife Coach�, has a career in the world of aesthetic medicine that spans over two decades. An authority on good plastic surgery and well versed in cosmetic surgery statistics, Ms. Lewis has been President of her own aesthetics consultancy since 1997 which has grown to have a presence in London and Palm Beach with a client roster that includes private individuals, both women and men, who seek out her advice on all their image enhancement needs. She also consults with aesthetic physicians and dentists, medspas and surgery centers, as well as an elite group of pharmaceutical, cosmetics, skin care and medical device companies around the world.

Ms. Lewis is the author of ten books, including America?s Cosmetic Doctors and Plastic Makes Perfect. She contributes regularly to consumer and industry publications and websites and has been featured on CNN, WNBC, WABC, BBC, GMTV, and in many media outlets around the world, including Vogue, W, The New York Times, London Evening Standard, Sunday London Times, Daily Mail, German Elle, French Vogue, and many more.

In this Vibrant Nation health and beauty guide, get honest answers to questions about what procedures may be performed on an outpatient basis under twilight anesthesia, what to expect in terms of scarring from various cosmetic procedures, how much time you need to plan to be away from work, or how to choose a surgeon you can trust. In the guide, you'll discover everything you need to know about eyelid lift surgery, breast reduction and lift, face lift costs, liposculpture, and more.

Vibrant Nation is dedicated to helping women over 50 connect with like-minded and similar lifestage women. In addition to eBooks, Vibrant Nation publishes conversations and weblogs about a variety of topics, from work & money, to fashion & beauty, from love & sex, to family & relationships. VibrantNation.com is the reliable online source for information, inspiration and peer support for 50 million women over 50.

According to Ms. Lewis, Vibrant Nation?s contributing editor, ?Every day, more members and contributors discuss cosmetic surgery and look to their peers for inspiration and support, so we produced this cosmetic procedure and plastic surgery guide to help them make informed decisions.?

Download this informative eBook Cosmetic Procedures and Plastic Surgery After 50: Expert Advice for Choosing the Best Option for You at http://www.vibrantnation.com/store/cosmetic-procedures-a .... �

Get the facts about cosmetic procedures from a source you can trust. Discover why thousands of women have become enthusiastic online visitors to VibrantNation.com.

About VibrantNation.com
VibrantNation.com is the leading online community for Baby Boomer women ? the place where they connect and support each other on issues unique to life after 50, including fashion, beauty, family, relationships, work, money, and sex.

A trusted resource for women 50+, Vibrant Nation features a growing network of over 150 midlife bloggers, promotes offline gatherings, and publishes digital health and beauty content written by Vibrant women experts.

A strategic marketing partner, VibrantNation helps marketers understand and reach this influential and fast-growing demographic. It has managed online marketing campaigns for major companies like Pfizer and Coca-Cola, and compiled its ongoing research in a book, Vibrant Nation: What Boomer Women 50+ Know, Think, Do & Buy.
http://www.vibrantnation.com

Source: http://www.prlog.org/11680047-vibrant-nation-cosmetic-procedures-guide-provides-expert-advice-and-options-for-women-over-50.html

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Cosmetic surgery gets cheaper, faster, scarier - USA Today

MIAMI ? Elsie Soto says she couldn't move her legs after she had liposuction and fat-transfer surgery last year at a clinic near here. But instead of sending her to a hospital, a nurse took Soto to her own house. Soto says she has no memory of being taken to the hospital two days later ? on her mother's insistence ? and needed two blood transfusions when she got there.

A 32-year-old single mother, Soto said she was tired of looking at all the beautifully toned people surrounding her in this popular beach town. She went to three area plastic surgeons before deciding to have her procedures done at Strax Rejuvenation and Aesthetics Institute. It was a simple matter of cost: The other estimates ranged from $10,000 to $12,000; Strax charged $5,000.

But after almost $50,000 in medical bills (including nearly $40,000 for her hospital stay) that insurance won't cover because the procedure was elective, three months out of work and continued pain down her left leg, Soto now says low-cost, high-volume cosmetic surgery clinics are not the way to go.

Strax, which has two locations in South Florida, boasts it is the busiest cosmetic surgery center in the U.S. Soto says that's part of the problem: She thinks she was just another patient whose problems got short shrift in what seemed like an assembly line of patients.

"On Sunday morning, everyone goes to Denny's and comes in and out, in and out, in and out," says Soto, a hospital purchasing aide. "That's how it was." Soto filed a complaint against Strax with The Joint Commission, an independent, not-for-profit organization that accredits most hospitals and many health care facilities, including Strax.

Strax says it is helping consumers by making cosmetic surgery affordable for the masses. Peter Mineo, an outside attorney for Strax, said in an e-mailed statement that Soto "suffered a bruise to her sciatic nerve," which he called a rare but well-known potential complication of fat-transfer surgery to the buttocks. He says Soto was told about the risk. The nurse treating Soto was violating company policy when she took Soto to her home, Mineo says, but called it a "very kind act." And Strax believes Soto's medical problems were quickly resolved, Mineo says. USA TODAY reviewed Soto's medical bills and a statement from her physical therapist.

A booming business

Critics call it the commoditization of cosmetic surgery. Procedures that once included lengthy consultations with plastic surgeons and trips to the hospital, now often involve meetings in office-park surgery centers with salespeople who tell prospective patients what "work" they need and how little it can cost when performed in their offices, say former patients, other plastic surgeons and plaintiff lawyers.

Elsie Soto says she still often cries herself to sleep because of the pain since her cosmetic surgery.

While these clinics typically employ plastic surgeons who are either board-certified or up for certification, lawyers, victims and other plastic surgeons say these new-style surgery clinics are under so much sales pressure they often don't sufficiently screen patients for medical problems, do inadequate follow-up and persuade patients to undergo procedures that are either unnecessary or unlikely to get good results.

Cosmetic procedures ranging from Botox to buttocks lifts performed by plastic surgeons were up 77% last year, as consumers flock to clinics including Strax, the national chain Lifestyle Lift, and other busy cosmetic surgery centers geared to the budget-minded.

"They've created these kind of fast food courts where people go in, pick from a menu of what they want done and the physician who meets with them is not necessarily the doctor who operates on them and he's not the one who follows up with them," says Soto's lawyer here, Spencer Aronfeld, who is representing other Strax patients. "This is a recipe for disaster."

Lifestyle Lift founder David Kent says, "There are no guarantees in medicine or surgery," but that the company wants every patient to be satisfied. In a recent recruitment letter to plastic surgeons, Kent said the 39-location company, which advertises heavily on TV, plans to open 40 more clinics nationwide.

With marketers playing a key role at some cosmetic surgery centers, former patients and lawyers say some of the clinics' claims about the low risk, dramatic results and short recuperation time are misstated. Lifestyle Lift's marketing practices, which are under investigation by the Florida attorney general, are "backed up by tons and tons of research," says CEO Gordon Quick. Still, Florida's attorney general has more than 60 complaints about the company, including several contesting its claims about fast recoveries, minimal pain and results that take years off one's appearance.

Two years ago, Lifestyle Lift settled a lawsuit by then-New York attorney general Andrew Cuomo charging that the company was writing its own online testimonials for existing websites and at least 10 sites it created to appear consumer-generated.

In its settlement agreement, the attorney general's office revealed internal e-mails, including one directing a Lifestyle Lift employee to "Put your wig and skirt on and tell them about the great experience you had" on the independent site RealSelf.com. Lifestyle Lift says it was simply posting the contents of letters it received from happy patients, although the settlement agreement says evidence shows many of the postings were written entirely by employees.

Jennifer Davis, a spokeswoman for Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi, says its 16-month probe is looking at Lifestyle Lift's advertising of a "facial rejuvenation procedure that is purported by them to be safer and less expensive than other traditional procedures, totally individualized for the client, and offers a quicker recovery time." Investigators, she says, are looking into possible violations of the Florida Deceptive and Unfair Trade Practices Act, which bans commercial practices that deceive consumers.

Left with lopsided ears

Joyce Wooten, 53, of Tampa said her surgeries at Lifestyle Lift "ruined my life," in her complaint to the Florida attorney general. She said the healing process was longer and more difficult than she was told and heard in advertising.

USA TODAY INVESTIGATION

PART 1: These women died after having liposuction. Their doctor wasn't board certified - but their was no law to stop him.

"I began hiding my face everywhere I went because people stared and some gasped," Wooten wrote, citing problems including loose flaps of skin on her neck and lopsided ears.

Lifestyle Lift says it did a "revision procedure" for Wooten at no cost in late 2008, but Wooten says that was only after she threatened a lawsuit. The company says she never returned for her follow-up, which is important for healing.

A happy patient

Lifestyle Lift founder Kent says its centers have performed about 140,000 face-lifts and have only "a few people we could not make happy."

Barbara Schmidt, 62, of Plantation, Fla., says she is one of the happy patients. She says she was self-conscious about her chin, which looked like it was "all in one" with her neck. Her Lifestyle Lift procedure, which included liposuction to her neck, made her look so much better, strangers "smile and say hello," something that never used to happen, she says.

Aronfeld, who says he fields several calls a day from unhappy Strax patients, has formally requested arbitration ? something Strax requires patients to agree in writing to do before suing ? on behalf of Soto, the survivors of Lidvian Zelaya, who died in December after having liposuction and fat-transfer surgery, and Barbara Yakin, who was hospitalized after a tummy tuck, thigh lift and liposuction at Strax last September.

Surgery death rates

Four Strax patients have died in the last two years. The company says three out of the four deaths were unrelated to complications of their surgeries. Zelaya, according to her autopsy, died of an "embolism due to complications of liposuction and fat transfer surgery." In a statement, Mineo called the embolism an "unavoidable complication of liposuction."

Miami plastic surgeon Alberto Gallerani wrote in an affidavit for the case that the amount of fat transferred and the fact it wasn't done in a hospital unnecessarily increased the risk of a fatal embolism. Roger Gordon, the doctor who performed the surgery, no longer has hospital privileges, according to the Northshore Medical Center FMC Campus and Florida Board of Medicine records.

Another patient died of an overdose of pain medication, the autopsy shows, and Mineo says it was far more than Strax prescribed. The autopsy shows another died of blood poisoning from a wound infection ? for which the patient "didn't seek timely medical attention," Mineo says. The fourth died of an "underlying and very rare" disease ? Uhl's ? that can only be detected through genetic testing or an autopsy, Mineo says.

Mineo maintains that Strax's safety record is "second to none." He says Zelaya is Strax's "one fatal complication" in the universe of 90,000 procedures it has performed. The cosmetic surgery field has a generally accepted level of mortality of one for every 50,000 surgeries, according to widely cited reports. That would give Strax a mortality rate that's about half the accepted level, Mineo says.

But Strax actually has a rate of four deaths in 90,000, which makes Strax's mortality rate almost twice what's considered acceptable in cosmetic surgery, says Miami plastic surgeon Adam Rubinstein. The American Association for Accreditation of Ambulatory Surgery Facilities, which accredits most outpatient surgery centers, mandates in their standards that all deaths occurring within 30 days after a surgery are included in their mortality rates, according to experts including Beverly Hills plastic surgeon Geoffrey Keyes, AAAASF's president-elect. Keyes is the lead author of two peer-reviewed studies of safety and fatalities in outpatient surgery, including one that analyzed more than 6 million procedures and found a death rate of one in 50,000 procedures.

Yakin, 60, says she collapsed when she got home after her Strax procedures, spent two days in intensive care at the hospital and required three more surgeries to correct infected wounds on her thighs and stomach.

Steps to take if considering cosmetic surgery

"The pain and suffering I went through, no one should have to go through," Yakin says.

Yakin developed a hematoma after the surgery, says Mineo, who called it a "well-recognized complication." Yakin was taking blood thinner medication so was cleared by her medical doctor ? though not a cardiologist ? before the surgery and stopped taking the medicine, Mineo says.

Yakin's doctor, Jeffrey Hamm, was on probation until last September following disciplinary action by Florida's Board of Medicine.

In its complaint, the board charged that Hamm ? while working for Strax ? failed to meet the "standard of care" for a patient after he didn't order additional lab tests or consultations when tests showed the person had "dangerously elevated" blood glucose levels. This earlier patient was hospitalized for almost two months with septic shock, respiratory and renal failure. Mineo says Hamm settled those charges because he "was financially broken by the proceedings."

Death after liposuction

In May 2009, Aura Javellana, 28, of Redmond, Wash., died of "acute lidocaine intoxication," according to the autopsy report. The day before, she had a liposuction procedure at Sono Bello Body Contouring Center, which has 10 locations in seven states. She took a cab by herself from Sono Bello to a hotel room to recuperate and was found dead by maids the next morning.

A lawsuit against Sono Bello filed by attorney Cydney Campbell Webster on behalf of the Javellana family alleged Javellana was not evaluated by any "licensed medical professional" ? only a company consultant ? and didn't meet her doctor until right before the surgery. The lawsuit also charged that the company falsely promoted the procedure as safe, saying it "ruled out" the complications from traditional liposuction.

The Washington state health department charged that the doctor who performed the surgery, Marco Sobrino, was guilty of unprofessional conduct, which means it believes his conduct met the legal definition of "incompetence, negligence or malpractice," says spokesman Gordon MacCracken. A hearing that could result in Sobrino having his license revoked is set for Sept. 27.

Penn Gheen, an attorney representing Sono Bello, says a marketing person who was "let go" created some materials independently that were given to some patients and "probably did downplay the risks more than the official materials." In a response to the suit, Sobrino's attorney denied that he was guilty of wrongful death or medical negligence.

The case was settled out of court in July for about $1.9 million, according to settlement documents filed in the case.

Phil Haeck, a Seattle plastic surgeon who heads the American Society of Plastic Surgeons, says the new approach to cosmetic surgery is especially worrisome when "medical professionals are not making the decisions."

"It violates the old doctor-patient relationship," Haeck says. "People want it cheaper, faster and don't ask enough questions."

Along with the Florida complaints, Lifestyle Lift has a 51% "worth it" rating among 360 reviews on RealSelf.com, a website about cosmetic procedures. The Better Business Bureau has received 19 complaints about the company in the past three years, nearly all about "products or services." Of those, 15 complaints were resolved with the assistance of BBB and four couldn't be resolved to the customer's satisfaction.

While these centers typically employ board-certified plastic surgeons, some don't have privileges to treat patients at hospitals, leaving patients to fend for themselves at emergency rooms. Soto says she now wishes she had her procedure performed at a hospital rather than an outpatient surgical center "so that if anything happened I was already there."

Awake during surgery

Doing procedures in office surgery centers saves money, something that many consumers, including Wooten, say they found attractive ? at least until they realized that it can be traumatic to have surgery under the local anesthesia often used in office settings.

Lifestyle Lift uses only oral sedatives and injections of a painkiller, lidocaine, which is similar to novocaine. Its offices are not accredited by any of the groups that certify hospitals or surgical centers, which rules out even the use of intravenous sedation to put patients into what's known as a partially asleep "twilight" state.

Kent says the centers have all the emergency equipment accreditation companies would require.

Wooten says that during her Lifestyle Lift procedure, she could tell the doctor was cutting around her ear and hitting it to get it to come loose from her head, according to her complaint to the Florida attorney general.

"I wish I had been completely asleep," Wooten said. "The worst part is remembering."

Beatriz Newman loves the results of her eyelift, facelift, neck liposuction and lip augmentation from Lifestyle Lift.

Kent acknowledges that local anesthesia is not for everyone and says the downsides are fully explained to patients.

And some satisfied former Lifestyle Lift patients, whose names were provided by the company, say they wouldn't have it any other way. Beatriz Newnam, 52, of Marco Island, Fla., says she was laughing and "telling jokes" during her surgery last August, which included an eyelift, face-lift, neck liposuction and lip augmentation.

Orlando facial plastic surgeon Edward Gross filed a complaint with the Florida Board of Medicine after he provided emergency room services in 2008 for what he called the "life threatening" condition of a Lifestyle Lift patient.

In the complaint, Gross wrote that the patient was "bleeding from the face" and needed emergency assistance with breathing and surgery for hematomas. He wrote that the patient, who settled a lawsuit against Lifestyle Lift out of court, was in intensive care on a ventilator and breathing tubes for six days.

He also charged that patient safety was at risk because her doctor didn't have hospital privileges and the facility did not meet the state's "standard of care" for office surgery.

Lifestyle Lift denied all allegations related to the safety of its facility and doctor, according to its response to a lawsuit Gross filed against the company seeking payment for these services.

Michelle Cordi of Orlando sued Lifestyle Lift last year, charging that she didn't get medical care from the company before her surgery and that the procedure left her with a wound that wasn't treated properly, which led to her hospitalization.

In a response to the suit, Lifestyle Lift denied the allegations and said it was not negligent.

"We've learned that the way you treat patients is as important as the medical procedure itself in terms of satisfaction," Quick says. "It's something the company continues to get better and better at."

Doctors can earn $1 million a year

Malcolm Paul, a prominent Newport Beach, Calif., plastic surgeon, says that after he saw a Lifestyle Lift plastic surgeon perform a face-lift, he became so convinced of the approach that he is now working as a consultant to the company.

In the recent letter sent to plastic surgeons and reviewed by USA TODAY, Kent said top-performing doctors earn more than $1 million a year in net income and those working two days a week can earn $450,000 a year.

Stephen Prendiville, a Fort Myers, Fla., facial plastic surgeon, says he's treated several patients who were unhappy with the results they got at Lifestyle Lift. Most had "visible, poorly executed face-lift scars with no discernible aesthetic improvement," he says. USA TODAY interviewed six other plastic surgeons who did not want their names used but made similar comments.

Prendiville says Lifestyle Lift's claims aren't based on any studies ever published in surgical journals, and the company uses terms including "revolutionary" when, he says, their procedure is really just a variant of a quick face-lift that's been done for decades by others.

Kent says the company now does small, medium and large-incision face-lifts and that the larger incisions are for people who have more sagging. Quick says traditional face-lifts are "a more invasive process" as they "go farther under the skin."

As for Soto, she says she still often cries herself to sleep because of the pain since her surgery. And she's changed her view on the competition to look good around her hometown.

"This is who I am. I'm not going to try to change," says Soto. "I'm just thankful I'm alive."

Source: http://www.usatoday.com/money/perfi/basics/story/2011-09-14/risks-low-cost-cosmetic-surgery/50409740/1

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Cosmetic surgery procedures often about feeling better, being more successful - Tampabay.com

Times staff, wires
In Print: Wednesday, September 28, 2011


For Mary Lou Lueders, 74, the main point of surgery was better vision. But the cosmetic improvement has happily surprised her.?

For Mary Lou Lueders, 74, the main point of surgery was better vision. But the cosmetic improvement has happily surprised her.?

[CHERIE DIEZ | Times]

TAMPA

Mary Lou Lueders never thought she would have cosmetic surgery. A widow whose social life revolves around her five children, Lueders also loves to go to the gym and work in her yard. She's too busy to brood about the march of time.

"I just thought I would grow old gracefully," said the 74-year-old Tampa resident.

But about a year and a half ago, her daughter pointed out that her upper eyelids had become so droopy, they were impairing her field of vision. Since it was a matter of function, not just looks, Lueders agreed to consider surgery.

She made an appointment with Tampa plastic surgeon Adam Scheiner, who said upper eyelid surgery would definitely improve her vision. He also told her that adding a laser procedure to remove the puffy malar mounds, also known as festoons, under her eyes would improve her overall appearance.

The eyelid procedure, considered medically necessary, would be covered by Medicare; eliminating the festoons, considered cosmetic, would cost about $2,000.

At her daughter's urging, Lueders decided to go for it. She's glad she did.

"People told me I looked 10, 20 years younger," said Lueders, who was surprised at the positive reaction. "Now I understand why women do this sort of thing. It makes them feel better and look better."

That's not news to her doctor, who is among the numerous experts who has seen an increase in seniors requesting cosmetic plastic surgery.

"I had a patient in her 90s come in for eyelid surgery," said Scheiner, who specializes in eyelid and facial plastic surgery at the Tampa Eye Clinic. "The face communicates so much. The natural course of aging may make us look sleepy, tired or sick all the time. That's not fair to those people who feel great but their face sends a different message."

Trend likely to grow

Last year there were 84,685 surgical procedures among patients age 65 and older, according to the American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery. They included 26,635 facelifts; 24,783 cosmetic eyelid operations; 6,469 liposuctions; 5,874 breast reductions; 3,875 forehead lifts; 3,339 breast lifts; and 2,414 breast augmentations.

Except for a brief turndown during the recession, those numbers have been rising for years now, and experts say the trend seems likely to accelerate as baby boomers begin to pass age 65.

Seniors in good physical health can be considered for most cosmetic surgeries. Advancing age is rarely a disqualifying factor. Those with multiple medical problems involving the lungs or heart may be discouraged from extensive surgery or may be steered toward less invasive procedures.

"It all depends on the type of anesthesia that will be needed. Longer surgeries with general anesthesia are of a little more concern than if we're using local anesthesia," Scheiner said.

More often it's unrealistic expectations or budget that precludes a patient.

"Someone may come in and just want Botox for a deep line on their face. But I know that's not going to make a big difference in their appearance. That's an unrealistic expectation,'' he said.

Or they may want to treat just one area, because that's all their budget will allow. "I know if we do that one thing and the rest isn't balanced, I will dissuade people until they can come back and we can do it all, so it looks natural and balanced,'' Scheiner said.

"I have to pay attention to neighboring areas. That's so critical.''

Reasons vs. risks

Any operation poses risks, but surprisingly few studies have focused on older patients and cosmetic enhancements. One report, published in the journal Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery in June, found that the hazards in people over age 65 are no greater than in the younger population.

Researchers from the Cleveland Clinic reviewed the medical records of 216 facelift patients over the course of three years. The researchers found no significant difference in the instances of minor or major complications between one group of patients whose average age was 70 and another group whose average age was 57.6.

There are as many reasons for getting plastic surgery as there are older patients, experts say. Some people are living longer and remaining healthier, and they want their physiques to align with their psyches. Some are preening for potential mates and want their feathers to look their freshest. Some are still working or looking for jobs and want to be seen as more youthful contenders.

And some are simply sick of slackened jowls, jiggly underarms and saggy eyelids. Gilbert Meyer, a retired film producer in Boynton Beach, who gave his age only as "over 75," saw Jacob Steiger, a facial plastic surgeon in Boca Raton, for an eye and neck lift last year. He spent $8,000.

"I was looking at myself in the mirror and didn't like what I was starting to see and did something about it," Meyer said. "Why not look as good as you can when you can?"

Some critics question whether the benefits are worth the risks, which may be underestimated.

"You know there are biases because of the underreporting of negative findings," said James Hughes, executive director of the Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies, a nonprofit research group in Hartford, Conn. "The doctors have more or less financial incentives to do these procedures, and that often leads them to understate alternative kinds of treatments or medical advice."

Harriet A. Washington, author of two books about medical ethics issues, asks how older patients can give informed consent to plastic surgery when so little is known of its risks to them, especially to those with chronic conditions like diabetes, osteoporosis and heart disease.

"It's one of those things that has crept up on us, and I think, as usual, we've embraced the technology before we've really embraced the ethical questions and dimensions," she said.

Assuming a patient is healthy, meets all of the presurgical criteria and understands that there are risks, why is it that people often are squeamish about seniors going under the knife?

Nancy Etcoff, an assistant clinical professor at Harvard Medical School who studies biology and social beliefs about beauty, believes the double-takes arise from our culture's mixed feelings about old people actively on the prowl.

"Part of our stereotype of old people is that they are social, warm and likeable, but powerless and sexless," she said. "Here we are in the age of Viagra, which is very well accepted, but suddenly the idea of older people, mostly women, wanting to be sexually attractive at that age makes us uncomfortable. If an older woman wants to regain eyelids or wants a breast that she doesn't have to tuck into a waistband, then why not?"

Times staff writer Irene Maher contributed to this report, which includes information from the New York Times.


By the numbers

84,685 surgical procedures in 2010 among patients 65 and older, a 21 percent rise from 2009

Cosmetic surgeries done for people older than 65 in 2010 include:

26,635 facelifts

24,783 cosmetic eyelid surgeries

6,469 liposuctions

5,874 breast reductions

3,875 forehead lifts

3,339 breast lifts

2,414 breast augmentations

Source: American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery


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Thursday, September 29, 2011

Cosmetic surgery gets cheaper, faster, scarier - USA Today

MIAMI ? Elsie Soto says she couldn't move her legs after she had liposuction and fat-transfer surgery last year at a clinic near here. But instead of sending her to a hospital, a nurse took Soto to her own house. Soto says she has no memory of being taken to the hospital two days later ? on her mother's insistence ? and needed two blood transfusions when she got there.

A 32-year-old single mother, Soto said she was tired of looking at all the beautifully toned people surrounding her in this popular beach town. She went to three area plastic surgeons before deciding to have her procedures done at Strax Rejuvenation and Aesthetics Institute. It was a simple matter of cost: The other estimates ranged from $10,000 to $12,000; Strax charged $5,000.

But after almost $50,000 in medical bills (including nearly $40,000 for her hospital stay) that insurance won't cover because the procedure was elective, three months out of work and continued pain down her left leg, Soto now says low-cost, high-volume cosmetic surgery clinics are not the way to go.

Strax, which has two locations in South Florida, boasts it is the busiest cosmetic surgery center in the U.S. Soto says that's part of the problem: She thinks she was just another patient whose problems got short shrift in what seemed like an assembly line of patients.

"On Sunday morning, everyone goes to Denny's and comes in and out, in and out, in and out," says Soto, a hospital purchasing aide. "That's how it was." Soto filed a complaint against Strax with The Joint Commission, an independent, not-for-profit organization that accredits most hospitals and many health care facilities, including Strax.

Strax says it is helping consumers by making cosmetic surgery affordable for the masses. Peter Mineo, an outside attorney for Strax, said in an e-mailed statement that Soto "suffered a bruise to her sciatic nerve," which he called a rare but well-known potential complication of fat-transfer surgery to the buttocks. He says Soto was told about the risk. The nurse treating Soto was violating company policy when she took Soto to her home, Mineo says, but called it a "very kind act." And Strax believes Soto's medical problems were quickly resolved, Mineo says. USA TODAY reviewed Soto's medical bills and a statement from her physical therapist.

A booming business

Critics call it the commoditization of cosmetic surgery. Procedures that once included lengthy consultations with plastic surgeons and trips to the hospital, now often involve meetings in office-park surgery centers with salespeople who tell prospective patients what "work" they need and how little it can cost when performed in their offices, say former patients, other plastic surgeons and plaintiff lawyers.

Elsie Soto says she still often cries herself to sleep because of the pain since her cosmetic surgery.

While these clinics typically employ plastic surgeons who are either board-certified or up for certification, lawyers, victims and other plastic surgeons say these new-style surgery clinics are under so much sales pressure they often don't sufficiently screen patients for medical problems, do inadequate follow-up and persuade patients to undergo procedures that are either unnecessary or unlikely to get good results.

Cosmetic procedures ranging from Botox to buttocks lifts performed by plastic surgeons were up 77% last year, as consumers flock to clinics including Strax, the national chain Lifestyle Lift, and other busy cosmetic surgery centers geared to the budget-minded.

"They've created these kind of fast food courts where people go in, pick from a menu of what they want done and the physician who meets with them is not necessarily the doctor who operates on them and he's not the one who follows up with them," says Soto's lawyer here, Spencer Aronfeld, who is representing other Strax patients. "This is a recipe for disaster."

Lifestyle Lift founder David Kent says, "There are no guarantees in medicine or surgery," but that the company wants every patient to be satisfied. In a recent recruitment letter to plastic surgeons, Kent said the 39-location company, which advertises heavily on TV, plans to open 40 more clinics nationwide.

With marketers playing a key role at some cosmetic surgery centers, former patients and lawyers say some of the clinics' claims about the low risk, dramatic results and short recuperation time are misstated. Lifestyle Lift's marketing practices, which are under investigation by the Florida attorney general, are "backed up by tons and tons of research," says CEO Gordon Quick. Still, Florida's attorney general has more than 60 complaints about the company, including several contesting its claims about fast recoveries, minimal pain and results that take years off one's appearance.

Two years ago, Lifestyle Lift settled a lawsuit by then-New York attorney general Andrew Cuomo charging that the company was writing its own online testimonials for existing websites and at least 10 sites it created to appear consumer-generated.

In its settlement agreement, the attorney general's office revealed internal e-mails, including one directing a Lifestyle Lift employee to "Put your wig and skirt on and tell them about the great experience you had" on the independent site RealSelf.com. Lifestyle Lift says it was simply posting the contents of letters it received from happy patients, although the settlement agreement says evidence shows many of the postings were written entirely by employees.

Jennifer Davis, a spokeswoman for Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi, says its 16-month probe is looking at Lifestyle Lift's advertising of a "facial rejuvenation procedure that is purported by them to be safer and less expensive than other traditional procedures, totally individualized for the client, and offers a quicker recovery time." Investigators, she says, are looking into possible violations of the Florida Deceptive and Unfair Trade Practices Act, which bans commercial practices that deceive consumers.

Left with lopsided ears

Joyce Wooten, 53, of Tampa said her surgeries at Lifestyle Lift "ruined my life," in her complaint to the Florida attorney general. She said the healing process was longer and more difficult than she was told and heard in advertising.

USA TODAY INVESTIGATION

PART 1: These women died after having liposuction. Their doctor wasn't board certified - but their was no law to stop him.

"I began hiding my face everywhere I went because people stared and some gasped," Wooten wrote, citing problems including loose flaps of skin on her neck and lopsided ears.

Lifestyle Lift says it did a "revision procedure" for Wooten at no cost in late 2008, but Wooten says that was only after she threatened a lawsuit. The company says she never returned for her follow-up, which is important for healing.

A happy patient

Lifestyle Lift founder Kent says its centers have performed about 140,000 face-lifts and have only "a few people we could not make happy."

Barbara Schmidt, 62, of Plantation, Fla., says she is one of the happy patients. She says she was self-conscious about her chin, which looked like it was "all in one" with her neck. Her Lifestyle Lift procedure, which included liposuction to her neck, made her look so much better, strangers "smile and say hello," something that never used to happen, she says.

Aronfeld, who says he fields several calls a day from unhappy Strax patients, has formally requested arbitration ? something Strax requires patients to agree in writing to do before suing ? on behalf of Soto, the survivors of Lidvian Zelaya, who died in December after having liposuction and fat-transfer surgery, and Barbara Yakin, who was hospitalized after a tummy tuck, thigh lift and liposuction at Strax last September.

Surgery death rates

Four Strax patients have died in the last two years. The company says three out of the four deaths were unrelated to complications of their surgeries. Zelaya, according to her autopsy, died of an "embolism due to complications of liposuction and fat transfer surgery." In a statement, Mineo called the embolism an "unavoidable complication of liposuction."

Miami plastic surgeon Alberto Gallerani wrote in an affidavit for the case that the amount of fat transferred and the fact it wasn't done in a hospital unnecessarily increased the risk of a fatal embolism. Roger Gordon, the doctor who performed the surgery, no longer has hospital privileges, according to the Northshore Medical Center FMC Campus and Florida Board of Medicine records.

Another patient died of an overdose of pain medication, the autopsy shows, and Mineo says it was far more than Strax prescribed. The autopsy shows another died of blood poisoning from a wound infection ? for which the patient "didn't seek timely medical attention," Mineo says. The fourth died of an "underlying and very rare" disease ? Uhl's ? that can only be detected through genetic testing or an autopsy, Mineo says.

Mineo maintains that Strax's safety record is "second to none." He says Zelaya is Strax's "one fatal complication" in the universe of 90,000 procedures it has performed. The cosmetic surgery field has a generally accepted level of mortality of one for every 50,000 surgeries, according to widely cited reports. That would give Strax a mortality rate that's about half the accepted level, Mineo says.

But Strax actually has a rate of four deaths in 90,000, which makes Strax's mortality rate almost twice what's considered acceptable in cosmetic surgery, says Miami plastic surgeon Adam Rubinstein. The American Association for Accreditation of Ambulatory Surgery Facilities, which accredits most outpatient surgery centers, mandates in their standards that all deaths occurring within 30 days after a surgery are included in their mortality rates, according to experts including Beverly Hills plastic surgeon Geoffrey Keyes, AAAASF's president-elect. Keyes is the lead author of two peer-reviewed studies of safety and fatalities in outpatient surgery, including one that analyzed more than 6 million procedures and found a death rate of one in 50,000 procedures.

Yakin, 60, says she collapsed when she got home after her Strax procedures, spent two days in intensive care at the hospital and required three more surgeries to correct infected wounds on her thighs and stomach.

Steps to take if considering cosmetic surgery

"The pain and suffering I went through, no one should have to go through," Yakin says.

Yakin developed a hematoma after the surgery, says Mineo, who called it a "well-recognized complication." Yakin was taking blood thinner medication so was cleared by her medical doctor ? though not a cardiologist ? before the surgery and stopped taking the medicine, Mineo says.

Yakin's doctor, Jeffrey Hamm, was on probation until last September following disciplinary action by Florida's Board of Medicine.

In its complaint, the board charged that Hamm ? while working for Strax ? failed to meet the "standard of care" for a patient after he didn't order additional lab tests or consultations when tests showed the person had "dangerously elevated" blood glucose levels. This earlier patient was hospitalized for almost two months with septic shock, respiratory and renal failure. Mineo says Hamm settled those charges because he "was financially broken by the proceedings."

Death after liposuction

In May 2009, Aura Javellana, 28, of Redmond, Wash., died of "acute lidocaine intoxication," according to the autopsy report. The day before, she had a liposuction procedure at Sono Bello Body Contouring Center, which has 10 locations in seven states. She took a cab by herself from Sono Bello to a hotel room to recuperate and was found dead by maids the next morning.

A lawsuit against Sono Bello filed by attorney Cydney Campbell Webster on behalf of the Javellana family alleged Javellana was not evaluated by any "licensed medical professional" ? only a company consultant ? and didn't meet her doctor until right before the surgery. The lawsuit also charged that the company falsely promoted the procedure as safe, saying it "ruled out" the complications from traditional liposuction.

The Washington state health department charged that the doctor who performed the surgery, Marco Sobrino, was guilty of unprofessional conduct, which means it believes his conduct met the legal definition of "incompetence, negligence or malpractice," says spokesman Gordon MacCracken. A hearing that could result in Sobrino having his license revoked is set for Sept. 27.

Penn Gheen, an attorney representing Sono Bello, says a marketing person who was "let go" created some materials independently that were given to some patients and "probably did downplay the risks more than the official materials." In a response to the suit, Sobrino's attorney denied that he was guilty of wrongful death or medical negligence.

The case was settled out of court in July for about $1.9 million, according to settlement documents filed in the case.

Phil Haeck, a Seattle plastic surgeon who heads the American Society of Plastic Surgeons, says the new approach to cosmetic surgery is especially worrisome when "medical professionals are not making the decisions."

"It violates the old doctor-patient relationship," Haeck says. "People want it cheaper, faster and don't ask enough questions."

Along with the Florida complaints, Lifestyle Lift has a 51% "worth it" rating among 360 reviews on RealSelf.com, a website about cosmetic procedures. The Better Business Bureau has received 19 complaints about the company in the past three years, nearly all about "products or services." Of those, 15 complaints were resolved with the assistance of BBB and four couldn't be resolved to the customer's satisfaction.

While these centers typically employ board-certified plastic surgeons, some don't have privileges to treat patients at hospitals, leaving patients to fend for themselves at emergency rooms. Soto says she now wishes she had her procedure performed at a hospital rather than an outpatient surgical center "so that if anything happened I was already there."

Awake during surgery

Doing procedures in office surgery centers saves money, something that many consumers, including Wooten, say they found attractive ? at least until they realized that it can be traumatic to have surgery under the local anesthesia often used in office settings.

Lifestyle Lift uses only oral sedatives and injections of a painkiller, lidocaine, which is similar to novocaine. Its offices are not accredited by any of the groups that certify hospitals or surgical centers, which rules out even the use of intravenous sedation to put patients into what's known as a partially asleep "twilight" state.

Kent says the centers have all the emergency equipment accreditation companies would require.

Wooten says that during her Lifestyle Lift procedure, she could tell the doctor was cutting around her ear and hitting it to get it to come loose from her head, according to her complaint to the Florida attorney general.

"I wish I had been completely asleep," Wooten said. "The worst part is remembering."

Beatriz Newman loves the results of her eyelift, facelift, neck liposuction and lip augmentation from Lifestyle Lift.

Kent acknowledges that local anesthesia is not for everyone and says the downsides are fully explained to patients.

And some satisfied former Lifestyle Lift patients, whose names were provided by the company, say they wouldn't have it any other way. Beatriz Newnam, 52, of Marco Island, Fla., says she was laughing and "telling jokes" during her surgery last August, which included an eyelift, face-lift, neck liposuction and lip augmentation.

Orlando facial plastic surgeon Edward Gross filed a complaint with the Florida Board of Medicine after he provided emergency room services in 2008 for what he called the "life threatening" condition of a Lifestyle Lift patient.

In the complaint, Gross wrote that the patient was "bleeding from the face" and needed emergency assistance with breathing and surgery for hematomas. He wrote that the patient, who settled a lawsuit against Lifestyle Lift out of court, was in intensive care on a ventilator and breathing tubes for six days.

He also charged that patient safety was at risk because her doctor didn't have hospital privileges and the facility did not meet the state's "standard of care" for office surgery.

Lifestyle Lift denied all allegations related to the safety of its facility and doctor, according to its response to a lawsuit Gross filed against the company seeking payment for these services.

Michelle Cordi of Orlando sued Lifestyle Lift last year, charging that she didn't get medical care from the company before her surgery and that the procedure left her with a wound that wasn't treated properly, which led to her hospitalization.

In a response to the suit, Lifestyle Lift denied the allegations and said it was not negligent.

"We've learned that the way you treat patients is as important as the medical procedure itself in terms of satisfaction," Quick says. "It's something the company continues to get better and better at."

Doctors can earn $1 million a year

Malcolm Paul, a prominent Newport Beach, Calif., plastic surgeon, says that after he saw a Lifestyle Lift plastic surgeon perform a face-lift, he became so convinced of the approach that he is now working as a consultant to the company.

In the recent letter sent to plastic surgeons and reviewed by USA TODAY, Kent said top-performing doctors earn more than $1 million a year in net income and those working two days a week can earn $450,000 a year.

Stephen Prendiville, a Fort Myers, Fla., facial plastic surgeon, says he's treated several patients who were unhappy with the results they got at Lifestyle Lift. Most had "visible, poorly executed face-lift scars with no discernible aesthetic improvement," he says. USA TODAY interviewed six other plastic surgeons who did not want their names used but made similar comments.

Prendiville says Lifestyle Lift's claims aren't based on any studies ever published in surgical journals, and the company uses terms including "revolutionary" when, he says, their procedure is really just a variant of a quick face-lift that's been done for decades by others.

Kent says the company now does small, medium and large-incision face-lifts and that the larger incisions are for people who have more sagging. Quick says traditional face-lifts are "a more invasive process" as they "go farther under the skin."

As for Soto, she says she still often cries herself to sleep because of the pain since her surgery. And she's changed her view on the competition to look good around her hometown.

"This is who I am. I'm not going to try to change," says Soto. "I'm just thankful I'm alive."

Source: http://www.usatoday.com/money/perfi/basics/story/2011-09-14/risks-low-cost-cosmetic-surgery/50409740/1

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Research and Markets: Emerging Markets Report into the Chinese and Indian Cosmetic Surgery, Facial Aesthetic and ...

Press Release Source: Research and Markets On Monday September 5, 2011, 11:45 pm EDT

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/ce7d65/emerging_markets) has announced the addition of the "Emerging Markets: Chinese and Indian Cosmetic Surgery, Facial Aesthetic and Medical Laser Markets 2011" report to their offering.

The "Emerging Markets: Chinese and Indian Cosmetic Surgery, Facial Aesthetic and Medical Laser Markets 2011" report is now available.

The total Chinese and Indian market for cosmetic surgery, facial aesthetics and medical laser devices was valued at nearly $730 million in 2010. The market will exceed $1.2 billion by 2017.

This market includes:

  • botulinum toxin A,
  • dermal fillers,
  • augmentation implants and
  • laser/light devices

The medical devices and pharmaceuticals covered in this report include a range of indications and target consumers. In addition, they provide a number of aesthetic alternatives at different price points for consumers. The combined Chinese and Indian market for cosmetic surgery, facial aesthetics and medical laser devices experienced growth in 2010 despite poor economic conditions caused by the global financial crisis of 2008 and 2009. Stable growth is expected for the overall market over the 2011-2017 forecast period. The dermal filler segment had the highest growth rate in 2010, which will continue over the forecast period. Growth trends for the two individual countries are expected to vary greatly.

Within the Chinese and Indian Cosmetic Surgery, Facial Aesthetic and Medical laser market, companies such as Allergan and Mentor lead the market, among many local competitors. This report provides a comprehensive and detailed analysis of market revenues by device type, market forecasts through 2017, unit sales, average selling prices, market drivers and limiters and a detailed competitive analysis, including manufacturer market shares and product portfolios.

The executive summary of this report is also available.

Key Topics Covered:

  • Emerging Markets For Cosmetic Surgery, Facial Aesthetics And Medical Laser Devices
  • Market Overview
  • Trend Analysis
  • Procedure Numbers
  • Market By Country
  • Market Drivers And Limiters
  • Competitive Analysis
  • Mergers And Acquisitions
  • Country Profiles
  • Procedure Numbers
  • China Procedure Numbers
  • India Procedure Numbers
  • Chinese Cosmetic Surgery, Facial Aesthetics And Medical Laser Device Market
  • Botulinum Toxin Amarket
  • Dermal Filler Market
  • Breast Augmentation Implant Market
  • Aesthetic Laser And Light Therapy Market
  • Market Drivers & Limiters
  • Overall Competitive Analysis
  • Indian Cosmetic Surgery, Facial Aesthetics And Medical Laser Device Market
  • Botulinum Toxin Amarket
  • Dermal Filler Market
  • Breast Augmentation Implant Market
  • Aesthetic Laser And Light Therapy Market
  • Market Drivers And Limiters
  • Overall Competitive Analysis

For more information visit http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/ce7d65/emerging_markets

Source: http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/110905/20110905005191.html?.v=1

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Plastic Surgery Laws Urge Caution When Choosing A Surgeon

Plastic surgery doctors must be board-certified to perform the procedures, but a series of incidents indicates that some have been deceiving patients and performing the surgery without the proper qualifications.

According to the American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS), several plastic surgeons� have been performing plastic surgery without becoming board-certified, which has led to patients getting injured and even dying on the surgery table. The ASPS has launched a new public safety campaign in response.

According to Malcolm Z. Roth, President of ASPS, doctors need to have more than a white coat to perform plastic surgery, and patients need to be careful when choosing a physician.

?Patients are getting injured, some are dying during procedures performed by non-board-certified plastic surgeons. We want patients to understand what to ask their doctor and what to look for so that they can maximize their chance of a safe and successful procedure,? said Roth, as quoted by Newswise. ?There is a misconception among consumers that as long as a doctor is certified in a medical field that he or she is qualified to practice plastic surgery. This is absolutely wrong and it is dangerous for patients.?

The term for this is called ?white coat deception? by plastic surgery industry leaders.

?If you are considering a plastic surgery procedure it is critical that your doctor is a member of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons,? added Roth, as quoted by Newswise.

Source: http://www.thirdage.com/news/plastic-surgery-laws-urge-caution-when-choosing-a-surgeon_09-26-2011

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Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Before Plastic Surgery, Check Out Your Doctor's Credentials, Warns American Society Of Plastic Surgeons

Editor's Choice
Main Category: Cosmetic Medicine / Plastic Surgery
Also Included In: Litigation / Medical Malpractice
Article Date: 26 Sep 2011 - 15:00 PDT email icon email to a friendprinter icon printer friendlywrite icon opinions

Before allowing any doctors to perform a plastic surgery procedure on you, you should check out their qualifications, the American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS) announced today in a new public safety campaign. This follows a series of reports on botched up plastic surgeries, carried out by non-board-certified plastic surgeons.

Malcolm Z. Roth, MD, ASPS President, said:

"Patients are getting injured, some are dying during procedures performed by non-board-certified plastic surgeons. We want patients to understand what to ask their doctor and what to look for so that they can maximize their chance of a safe and successful procedure."

White Coat Deception - a term used by plastic surgery industry leaders. If a doctor is wearing a white coat, it does not necessarily mean that he/she is a qualified plastic surgeon.

Lab coat and scrubs
A white coat is just that - a coat. It is not a board certification in plastic surgery

Dr. Roth said:

"There is a misconception among consumers that as long as a doctor is certified in a medical field that he or she is qualified to practice plastic surgery. This is absolutely wrong and it is dangerous for patients. If you are considering a plastic surgery procedure it is critical that your doctor is a member of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons. This is the best way to be certain that he or she has completed the necessary training and meets certain standards to practice plastic surgery."

By law, in the USA any doctor who has a medical license to practice in any field of medicine can legally perform plastic surgery. They do not have to be board certified in plastic surgery. Texas, Louisiana, Florida and California have Truth-In-Advertising requirements which demand that medical providers be clear about their training.

Dr. Steven Teitelbaum, MD, an ASPS Member Surgeon who practices in the Los Angeles area, said:

"Today when you get your medical license you can practice in any medical field that you choose. What should happen is that every state medical board should say, 'if you're trained in pediatrics you are allowed to practice pediatrics and if you're trained in orthopedics you can practice orthopedics.' But, unfortunately, most state laws and regulations enable some physicians to drift into the practice of plastic surgery without proper training and certification. It has become increasingly apparent that some physicians fail to use proper judgment and enter into practice areas beyond their core training."

Dr. Teitalbaum explains that a growing number of patients are coming to him to have botched plastic surgery procedures fixed, all of them carried out by non-board-certified doctors. He quoted the case of one of his patients, Dinora Rodriquez who had a breast implant surgery from a non-board-certified plastic surgeon. When she woke up after her operation, she found that the implants were merged together. Her surgeon had also decided to do a procedure on her eyes without asking her first. She is unable to close her eyes properly now.

Dinora Rodriguez said:

"It was a terrible experience waking up from surgery and seeing that this had happened. I didn't know to check my doctor's qualifications and I regret it."

The ASPS says that when you are checking out your plastic surgeon:

  • Ask whether he/she is board certified in plastic surgery by the American Board of Plastic Surgery
  • Seek out a certificate in the doctor's office that is endorsed by the American Society of Plastic Surgeons
  • Click on "Find a Surgeon" at www.plasticsurgery.org. See if your doctor is listed there.
Written by Christian Nordqvist
Copyright: Medical News Today
Not to be reproduced without permission of Medical News Today
Visit our �cosmetic medicine / plastic surgery section for the latest news on this subject.

Source: ASPS

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Christian Nordqvist. "Before Plastic Surgery, Check Out Your Doctor's Credentials, Warns American Society Of Plastic Surgeons." Medical News Today. MediLexicon, Intl., 26 Sep. 2011. Web.
27 Sep. 2011. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/235012.php>


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Exclusive: Michael Lohan Still Slamming Ali Lohan Plastic Surgery Rumors - RumorFix


Michael Lohan is slamming reports that his daughter Ali has had plastic surgery. Earlier this month, rumors began spreading that Ali had gone under the knife after she was photographed looking a bit different than we remembered her, but Michael says it?s all in the pounds ? or lack thereof.

PICTURES: Exclusive: Inside Dina Lohan?s Birthday Party

?You know, it?s a bunch of nonsense. Ali?s gorgeous. She lost weight and she looks thinner. Where?s the first place you lose weight? In your face. Give me a break,? a riled up Michael explains before harkening back to a similar story about his other more famous daughter. ?Same thing with Lindsay. They said she had a boob job years ago. Were they wrong? Yes! My kids don?t need any plastic surgery. They?re gorgeous and Dina looks just as good as they do.?

Another person who agrees with Michael ? and this is a rare occasion we might add ? is his ex-wife Dina. At her New York birthday party earlier this month, she told RumorFix exclusively, ?Ali has never had any plastic surgery. The rumors are totally false.?

Still, our resident plastic surgeon expert and The Doctors co-host, Dr. Drew Ordon, says Ali has had some work done. ?Her cheek bones have totally changed ? much higher than they were. More volume in the mid face ? the tip of the nose has changed. I think projection of the chin and the angle of the jaw has also changed.?

That being said, who do you believe?

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Source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNE21UI1wDJ_B_dLCGm8G5SJH92cjA&url=http://rumorfix.com/2011/09/exclusive-michael-lohan-still-slamming-ali-lohan-plastic-surgery-rumors/

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Baltimore Plastic Surgeon on Patient Propensity for Breast Augmentation with Silicone Implants - PRWeb

Baltimore, MD (PRWEB) September 28, 2011

The most recent data from the American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery (ASAPS) shows more than 9.3 million cosmetic procedures were performed in 2010, with breast augmentation highlighted as the most popular form of surgical aesthetic enhancement. Of the 318,123 breast augmentation procedures performed, 62% of patients chose silicone breast implants, a preference Dr. James Vogel, a board-certified plastic surgeon in Baltimore, MD, attributes to the more natural look and feel of the newer generation of implants.

Dr. Vogel says his Baltimore breast augmentation patients prefer the new silicone implants, which are made of a cohesive silicone gel: ?The main reason patients prefer the new silicone implants is because they are more natural in appearance and softer to the touch when compared to saline implants.? At his practice, Dr. Vogel says his patients prefer silicone roughly 85% of the time, which presents a greater patient propensity toward silicone than the national average presented by the ASAPS study.

However, whether Dr. Vogel is performing liposuction, breast augmentation, or a breast lift in Baltimore, he says his main focus is patient safety and satisfaction. He adds that each treatment plan is completely customized to the patient?s cosmetic enhancement goals, and can often be performed with sedation only, not a general anesthesia: ?Breast augmentation in our certified surgical facility is performed with local anesthesia and sedation to maximize safety and patient comfort.?

Regardless of his patients? preference for silicone or saline breast implants, Dr. Vogel says patient education plays an integral role in both safety and comfort. "Patient education is crucial to overall satisfaction because a happy patient is one whose surgical result is equal to or greater than what she expected. The pre-operative educational counseling is the time when these realistic goals are discussed and established. A comprehensive and often second or third consult with the patient ensures excellent pre-operative communication."

About James E. Vogel, MD, FACS

Dr. James Vogel earned his medical degree from the Mount Sinai School of Medicine. He then completed a general surgery residency at Tufts New England Medical Center, as well as the University of North Carolina, and his plastic surgery residency at the Johns Hopkins Hospital. Dr. Vogel is certified by the American Board of Plastic Surgery, is a fellow of the American College of Surgeons, and a member of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons and the American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery.

The plastic surgery practice of Dr. James Vogel is located at 4 Park Center Court, Ste. 100 Owings Mills, MD 21117, and can be reached at (410) 484-8860, or found online at drvogelplasticsurgeon.com or facebook.com/drjamesevogel.

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Source: http://www.prweb.com/releases/plastic-surgery/baltimore-md/prweb8834410.htm

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American Society of Plastic Surgeons Urges Patients to Check Up on Their Surgeons for Their Safety - ABC News

After going into surgery for a simple repair of her breast implants, Dinora Rodriguez, 40, awoke from the procedure to find that her plastic surgeon had left her with conjoined breasts ? a uniboob, essentially. Without her knowledge or permission, the surgeon had also nip/tucked her eyelids, leaving Rodriguez with eyes that to this day cannot close all the way.

Rodriguez learned the hard way -- you always have to vet your plastic surgeon.

"A friend had recommended the doctor to me. My biggest mistake is that I didn't check any of her credentials. I found out later that she had done really bad surgeries on some other people too," Rodriguez told ABCnews.com.

The doctor in question was licensed to practice as a plastic surgeon in California, where Rodriguez lives, but she was not board certified by the American Board of Plastic Surgery.

After a year of pain and disfigurement, Rodriguez sued her doctor for malpractice and says she found out that the corrective surgery on her breasts was not even necessary in the first place.

"She told me that she needed to replace the implants because they were leaking and I believed her. She gave me a good price on the surgery and I said yes," she said.

Now Rodriguez has become the poster child for a new safety campaign spearheaded by the new president of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS), Dr. Malcolm Roth. The campaign, announced Monday at the annual ASPS conference, warns against "white coat deception" ? basically, just because a doctor has a white coat, and even an M.D., doesn't mean they are qualified to perform plastic surgery.

In 48 states it is currently legal in the United States for doctors who are not certified by the board of plastic surgeons to practice cosmetic and plastic surgery.

"This means that we have other physicians creeping in who have taken a course and think they can do plastic surgery," said Roth. "It's not the same as going through six years in training specifically in plastic surgery, plus the continual training and code of ethics that are required for those who are board-certified," he said.

"People spend months or years making a decision on which care they're going to purchase ? it's no different when having a procedure performed. Plastic surgery is elective, there's plenty of time to do your homework and that's really all we're asking: do your homework," Roth said.

The Check-Up Before the Nip/Tuck

Rodriguez ended up settling her malpractice suit out of court. She says the compensation she received barely covered her reconstructive surgery she needed. Because the surgeon had cut across the two separate "pockets" that normally hold breast tissue, the implants were able to touch in the middle, said Dr. Steven Teitelbaum, a plastic surgeon in Los Angeles who did Rodriguez's reconstructive surgery.

"I had to create two entirely new pockets beneath the muscles to fix it," he told ABCnews.com. "[The first surgeon], violated many basic rules of the way breast implants are done. [The surgeon] cut across muscles you should never cut across," he said.

Source: http://abcnews.go.com/Health/Wellness/buyer-beware-uncertified-doc-botches-surgery-woman-uniboob/story?id=14582843

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