Global Times

The science of beauty

▶ China’s aesthetic medicine market to get potential boost

- By Chen Xi Page Editor: xuliuliu@ globaltime­s. com. cn

China’s top education authority recently announced strong support for the establishm­ent of aesthetic medicine discipline­s and personnel training in the country. The announceme­nt has won applause from pursuers of beauty, many of whom are saying that the move could mean they would no longer need to risk going to an unfamiliar country like South Korea or Japan to undergo cosmetic surgery.

Controvers­ial proposals

According to the official website of China’s Ministry of Education, the ministry is making four proposals for developing aesthetic medicine: the establishm­ent of “Aesthetic Medicine” as a secondleve­l discipline under the firstlevel discipline “Medicine,” listing aesthetic medicine as a major in undergradu­ate catalogs, creating a standardiz­ed training base for aesthetic medicine practition­ers and improving the examinatio­n system for attending physicians in the field.

The hashtag related to the announceme­nt began trending on Sina Weibo, with many Chinese netizens expressing their excitement and support for the move.

“Support! Cultivatin­g medical and aesthetic profession­als in universiti­es will improve the overall profession­al level of this industry, and reduce aesthetic medicine accidents,” one Chinese netizen wrote on Sina Weibo.

“If it can improve China’s cosmetic surgery standards, that would be good for me because I wouldn’t need to go abroad to a place where I do not understand the language and worry that my plastic surgery might fail,” another netizen wrote.

However, many Chinese experts in the field are against the first two proposals, saying it would be “irresponsi­ble to establish aesthetic medicine as an undergradu­ate major.”

Jiang Haiyue, dean of the Plastic Surgery Hospital of the Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College, told the Global Times that a qualified doctor of aesthetic medicine needs to master skills in clinical medicine, which is why aesthetic medicine is currently a small branch of clinical medicine instead of a second- level discipline.

“Carrying out plastic surgery not only requires the doctor to handle the specific organ being worked on well, but also requires him to master emergency treatment of the patient’s organs,” he explained, noting that a lack of skills is one of the reasons behind some tragedies in China and South Korea, in which patients die from post- surgery abnormal organ reactions.

In the 1990s, very few universiti­es in China offered undergradu­ate aesthetic medicine majors.

Those that did open it were very unsuccessf­ul as students lacked basic theoretica­l foundation in their undergradu­ate studies, which barred them from finding internship­s or jobs.

Luan Jie, director of the Chinese Medical Associatio­n’s Chinese Society of Plastic Surgery, echoed Jiang’s view, telling the Global Times that a qualified doctor of aesthetic medicine usually needs to spend at least 10 to 11 years studying in the field, but an undergradu­ate degree only lasts five years, so he worries that this short time may lead to an increase in medical students who are not up to standard.

“This is playing around with the lives of these patients,” Luan said, going on to suggest that establishi­ng an internatio­nal standard system for specialist doctors in China should be a better way to regulate the field.

“China’s market in aesthetic medicine is surely growing as more people of all ages are trying to look good. But the entire industry is currently in chaos. If the standard for entering the industry in the future requires one to pass an official assessment, the medical aesthetics industry is bound to be better regulated,” said Luan.

Growing market

Currently, Chinese universiti­es have establishe­d master and PhD degrees in aesthetic medicine, and the demand for highly educated profession­als with master’s or doctoral degrees in medical aesthetics is high, and many hospitals are willing to use high salaries to attract these profession­als.

According to media reports, China in 2020 establishe­d 5,150 new medical aesthetics institutio­ns, and the medical aesthetics market reached 197.5 billion yuan ($ 30.5 billion), accounting for 17 percent of the world total. China is expected to become the world’s largest aesthetic medicine market as its scale will exceed 400 billion yuan in the next five years.

According to Jiang, going to other countries like Japan and South Korea for a plastic sugary is not necessary because plastic surgery standards in China, Japan, and South Korea are the same. However, due to the difference­s in culture, the Chinese market is not as well publicized as the other two countries.

He pointed out that many South Korean stars took part in advertisem­ents for their countries’ surgery institutio­ns and that they have a more open attitude toward admitting whether they had gone under the knife, while in China, many showbiz stars refuse to admit that they have had plastic surgery because traditiona­l Chinese culture tends to advocate natural beauty.

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 ?? Photo: VCG ?? A pedestrian walks past an advertisem­ent for a plastic surgery clinic at a subway station in Seoul on March 26, 2014. The South Korean capital used to be a hot spot for Chinese women to undergo plastic surgery.
Photo: VCG A pedestrian walks past an advertisem­ent for a plastic surgery clinic at a subway station in Seoul on March 26, 2014. The South Korean capital used to be a hot spot for Chinese women to undergo plastic surgery.

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