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Does the world need another book on cosmetic surgery?
Maybe not, but my patients could use one. It was time for me to
review my philosophies and strategies of cosmetic surgery and
articulate them. Procedures change, perspectives change and I've
changed as well. I believe my perspectives on the topic will be
insightful not only to cosmetic surgery, but life in general.
During the last decade I have witnessed a lot more turbulence
regarding cosmetic surgery than I would have predicted. Ten years
ago, I thought cosmetic surgery would simply evolve to a highly
acceptable and rather normal approach to correcting and improving
aspects of physical appearance. While it has gained wide spread
attention and increased acceptance, it remains laced with mysticism
and often shrouded in secrecy. Consequently, its acceptance level
remains far below its potential. People who would significantly
benefit from cosmetic surgery are often saddled with erroneous
information or conflicting presentations.
Doctors have often been the worse enemy to
the public it wants to serve. "Turf wars" between cosmetic
surgeons, plastic surgeons, facial plastic surgeons, dermatologic
surgeons, ophthalmologic plastic surgeons, and a host of other
doctors performing cosmetic procedures have further limited potential
patients' pursuits. The desire to corner the market on patients
has only worked to scare many people away from the market. Talk
shows love to show botched results and get doctors from different
backgrounds to criticize one another. The net result is fear rather
than understanding. Doctors, perhaps to cover their behinds, and
perhaps to appear "expert", will often elaborate on
the negative.
Additionally, raging controversies such as the recent FDA
ban on silicone gel breast implants (except in specific cases)
and the huge global settlements (presently stalled in bankruptcy)
from several of the manufacturers has furthered misperceptions
about cosmetic breast augmentation. The actual scientific truths
have been a far cry from the public perceptions. This is not to
imply that there were or are no problems associated with the procedure.
As will be discussed in later chapters, why the problems occurred
may not be as obvious as the FDA, the media, the attorneys, and
some doctors might have you believe.
I am a firm believer that there is considerably more good
in this world of ours than bad. However, it is generally the negative,
the aberrations, that make news. If 250,000 commuters get to work
safely, no one reports it. If one person crashes into a bus, it
makes every news program in town. In this regard, thousands of
people have had successful cosmetic procedures and rightfully
blend into society. Typically, it is the unhappy patient, or the
one with the poor result, which is heard from. Indeed, it's a
testimony to its overall safety and the generally positive outcomes
that cosmetic surgery has not become an extinct form of medicine.
Less I be branded a hypocrite, it should almost go without
saying, that I am also writing this book for my own benefit. I
enjoy sharing my thoughts and spreading information about my field
of interest. I would like to eventually see a society which has
evolved to the point where people can recognize a bothersome physical
trait and comfortably fix it when feasible. I hope the book will
not only answer questions, but also provoke questions and comments.
I hope the book will be fun, as well as helpful.
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