Beijing Review

Chaotic Medical Cosmetic Industry

Nanfang Weekly November 20

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With a compound annual growth rate of over 20 percent in recent years, China’s medical cosmetic market has become the second largest in the world. Although it is booming, the market is chaotic and disordered. For example, many practition­ers were informally trained and some products meet no standards.

The root problem is that the medical nature of this sector is diluted. For many people, there is no difference between a hair transplant and a manicure. Generally speaking, the beauty industry is divided into two categories, life cosmetolog­y and medical cosmetolog­y. The former consists of procedures like improving the skin by moisturizi­ng or water-locking techniques and is not traumatic or invasive. The latter is traumatic and invasive, and includes double eyelid surgery and rhinoplast­y.

It is clear that medical cosmetolog­y procedures must be under the supervisio­n of medical department­s. That means these organizati­ons should not operate without medical license and people without qualificat­ions should not be allowed to engage in the industry. Hence, the medical nature of medical cosmetics should be emphasized and made clear. Only by doing so will people understand which procedures can be done in cosmetic salons and which cannot.

Going forward, the number of medical cosmetic institutio­ns will continue to grow due to brisk demand. Promoting high-quality developmen­t and protecting people’s legal rights will test the management ability of relevant department­s.

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