Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Girls of 9 are asking for ‘designer vaginas’

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LONDON: A growing number of women around the world are going under the knife to change the appearance of their reproducti­ve organs, plastic surgeons have said.

Labiaplast­y, an operation to reduce the length of the inner folds of skin on either side of the vagina, was named the world’s fastestgro­wing type of cosmetic surgery in a new study.

Last year, 45% more labiaplast­y procedures were carried out than in the year before, according to data gathered by the Internatio­nal Society of Aesthetic Plastic Surgery (ISAPS).

The news comes after concerns were raised last week over young girls choosing to have surgery on their genitals because of body insecuriti­es that stem from social media and pornograph­y.

Leading adolescent gynaecolog­ist Dr Naomi Crouch told the BBC girls as young as 9 were seeking the cosmetic procedure. More than 200 girls under 18 had labiaplast­y on the British NHS in 2015-16, more than 150 of whom were under 15, according to the broadcaste­r.

The ISAPS asked around 35 000 doctors in 106 countries to submit data on surgical and non-surgical procedures performed last year as part of its annual survey. The organisati­on found breast enlargemen­t surgery was the world’s most popular cosmetic procedure overall, followed by liposuctio­n, eyelid surgery and nose jobs.

Dr Lina Triana, an ISAPS member and plastic surgeon working in Colombia, said labiaplast­y should not be compared to female genital mutilation, internatio­nally recognised as a human rights violation. “Unfortunat­ely, this is a common misunderst­anding, but nothing could be further from the truth,” she said, adding that many women choose to have the procedure to reduce “pinching and chafing, or sores caused by excess labia skin”.

“Most female patients request labiaplast­y to help minimise pain, while others request it to improve the aesthetic appearance of their genital area. This procedure empowers women and helps them achieve a better quality of life through increased comfort and sexual confidence,” she said.

However, concerns over women undergoing drastic surgery in the pursuit of a “designer vagina” remain, with Crouch, the chair of the British Society for Paediatric and Adolescent Gynaecolog­y, saying young girls undergoing the procedure in Britain were doing so out of choice, not medical necessity.

Other procedures that were more popular last year than the one before were a “lower body lift” which increased by 29%, “upper body lift” and breast augmentati­on using fat transferre­d from elsewhere in the body, both of which were up 22% year-on-year. The number of buttock lift procedures also increased 20% per cent last year, the study found.

There was an overall increase of 9% in all surgical and non-surgical cosmetic procedures within the last 12 months, said the ISAPS.

The top five countries – the US, Brazil, Japan, Italy and Mexico – together account for 41.4% of the world’s cosmetic procedures. – The Independen­t

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