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November 24, 2009

Plastic surgeons get Botox too

I've always wondered if doctors are more or less apt to seek treatment for medical conditions. Well, when it comes to plastic surgery, the doctor is often the patient, a new study finds.

In a survey of 276 members of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons, 62 percent said they had gone under the knife for at least one procedure. Most receive minimally invasive procedures such as laser hair removal chemical peels and Botox -- no word of whether they throw Botox parties. A third had gone under a surgical procedure, with liposuction being the most common.


Women surgeons were more likely than men to have cosmetic surgery. The study about the survey -- appearing in the December issue of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery -- suggests they can be an asset to patients who are trying to decide which kind of reconstructive surgery to receive.

Is this the result of sheer vanity, having all these nifty tools within an arm's reach, or true medical necessity? I wonder.

AP photo


Posted by Kelly Brewington at 7:08 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Surgery
        

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About Picture of Health
Kelly Brewington came to the health beat a year ago after covering everything from education and government to race and immigration in her 11 years as a reporter. Since then, she has tackled stories on autism, heart failure and acupuncture used to treat drug addiction. She’s been fascinated by medicine since childhood, when her doctor dad and nurse mom gave her Gray’s Anatomy coloring book to play with. She also blames her early exposure to the field of medicine for her hypochondria.

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