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Dr.
Jeffrey Rosenthal, director of Rosenthal Cosmetic Surgery and
Skin Care Center in Fairfield, says the effects of cosmetic
surgery become a self-fulfilling prophecy - increased
self-confidence after surgery leads the world to treat the
patient in a way that is consistent with their higher
self-image.
Mirror,
mirror, on the wall
Cosmetic
health care gains in popularity as stigmas fade
By DAVID
TOTH
The
graying of baby boomers coupled with the growing acceptance of
medical intervention to improve physical appearance has
contributed to the growth in the cosmetic health-care industry,
local medical practitioners say.
"Baby
boomers are reaching the magical (middle) age and they're
physically healthier and economically more stable than their
parents, and they want to maintain that healthy glow," said Dr.
Jeffrey Rosenthal, director of Rosenthal Cosmetic Surgery and
Skin-Care Center in Fairfield.
Longer-lasting health usually means a longer-lasting career.
"There are a number of executives who tell me 'I'm looked at as
slightly older and I have information to give out, but people
are not listening or looking at me because I look older.'"
Figures
released last year by the American Society for Aesthetic Plastic
Surgery show that surgical and nonsurgical cosmetic procedures
in the United States have increased by 44 percent in 2004 to
nearly 11.9 million from the year before. Separate figures for
Fairfield County were unavailable.
The most
frequently performed procedure was Botox injection and the most
popular surgical procedure was liposuction.
For the
most part, the stigma has gone out of resorting to medical
intervention to improve one's appearance, said Dr. Ben Schultz,
owner of Brick Walk Esthetic Dentistry in Fairfield. "Cosmetic
dentistry is a want, not a need. But nowadays, people don't have
any problems doing what they want to do, not just what they need
to do." Schultz cited shows such as "Extreme Makeover," where
contestants undergo cosmetic surgery to improve their
appearances with making these options more popular in the
mainstream. Common cosmetic dental work includes veneers, crowns
and bridges as well as tooth whitening.
Both
Schultz and Rosenthal point to the crossover between cosmetic
procedures. "The people who come to me usually do before or
after they've done other types of surgery to improve their
looks," Schultz said. It is common for a patient to have already
undergone breast augmentation procedures or liposuction before
she settles into Schultz's dental chair.
Rosenthal
said some people who undergo Lasik surgery to correct their
eyesight suddenly see the wrinkles after they are no longer
hidden by glasses and decide to improve various parts of their
bodies.
Schultz
said most of his patients are in the 40-to-60-year-old category
and that they span all income levels.
"It is a
matter of prioritizing. You can buy a new car, but that might
last you only a few years, as opposed to spending the money on
your teeth, which may be a better long-term investment," he
said.
Rosenthal
said his patients cross the generation gap, although he added
that most facelift candidates are women in their late 40s and
early 50s.
Income
levels of patients vary. "You don't have to be wealthy, or have
an obsessive-compulsive nature to (undergo cosmetic surgery),"
Rosenthal said.
He said
the industry average income of a person undergoing cosmetic
surgery is $50,000 a year.
Both
Schultz and Rosenthal believe in the life-changing power of
well-executed cosmetic procedures. Schultz cites a 58-year-old
female patient who started dating shortly after she had her
teeth revamped. Rosenthal spoke of a woman who was interviewing
in vain for jobs. After receiving Botox treatment, she was
finally hired. "Obviously there are other factors involved;
however, tension brings out the wrinkles in someone's face and
she believed she was being perceived as worried and intense,"
Rosenthal said.
In many
ways, the effects of cosmetic surgery become a self-fulfilling
prophecy as a person's self-confidence rises after looking and
feeling better and the world begins to treat them in a way that
is consistent with their self-image.
Dr. Jeffrey
Rosenthal,
director of Rosenthal
Cosmetic Surgery and Skin Care Center in Fairfield, says the
effects of cosmetic surgery become a self-fulfilling prophecy -
increased self-confidence after surgery leads the world to treat
the patient in a way that is consistent with their higher
self-image. Mirror, mirror, on the wall... July
18, 2005

There are life experiences and there
are life altering ones!
Which do you desire?
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