Khaleej Times

PLASTIC SURGEONS WORRIED ABOUT RISING BEAUTY EXPECTATIO­NS

- Jasmine Al Kuttab jasmine@khaleejtim­es.com

Doctors in the UAE are concerned over the increasing demand for plastic surgeries in the UAE to attain ‘perfect’ images, an influentia­l trend due to the use of social media, Khaleej Times has learned.

Dr Leon Alexandar, specialist plastic surgeon, Universal Hospitals Abu Dhabi, said young patients are wanting to reconstruc­t or ‘photoshop’ themselves to look more like the people they follow in the virtual world. “Social media does more harm than good because a lot of patients have false high expectatio­ns about plastic surgery and we are at the receiving end of that.”

He said patients even believe plastic surgery will have no scarring because they see photos on social media of actresses and influencer­s without scars. “They say: I want my face to be perfect like hers. I tell the patients: No, I can’t do that for you, these images are all photoshopp­ed, retouched and makeup is used to hide the marks and scaring.”

Dr Alexandar said patients also come to him requesting to look like certain Hollywood or Bollywood stars. “In the UAE, the number one plastic surgery requests are Hollywood celebritie­s, and the second are Bollywood celebritie­s, with many male patients wanting to look like Salman Khan and females wanting to look like Katrina Kaif.”

He said doctors must, therefore, educate patients about the reality of the procedure, which is “no walk in the park”.

“Patients must know these famous people might look perfect on screen, but we know that behind all that perfection, there is hard work, they have dedicated trainers, psychologi­sts, dietitians, hairdresse­rs and makeup artists.

“We have to be realistic to them, the surgeons and experts in the field must inform the patients to not expect the results they see online, the results depend on the body requiremen­ts, the healing and skin type.”

He stressed that despite the doctor’s efforts, patients continue to have false expectatio­ns. “This really puts us under a lot of pressure,” he added.

Dr Alexandar added that social media has made such a significan­t influence on young women in today’s society, that women as young as 20, are requesting the ‘Brazilian Butt Lift,’ which is often promoted online by celebritie­s and influencer­s. “They look at these bikini models and they say: I want this kind of body. These young girls have false and high expectatio­ns, and we must tell them we cannot recreate the same body parts they are imagining.

“I always underplay my results, because I don’t want to give pa- tients a false expectatio­n or promise.” But it is not just the celebritie­s and social media influencer­s negatively affecting young generation­s today, it is the “unethical” doctors themselves.

“Many surgeons are also guilty because they promote themselves and even reveal aggressive clips of their procedures on social media, which is not only something we are not supposed to do, as per the Emirates Plastic Surgery Society, but it is also unethical.”

He said people should not fall for physicians and companies who promote themselves on social media, particular­ly those who use photos and clips of procedures. “This is their marketing strategy, they only do it to bring in more patients, but medical profession­als should stick to medical ethics.”

Dr Alexandar advises young people to simply not believe everything they see online, because if it looks too good to be true, then it probably is. “Do throughout research about the doctor and ensure he is a board-certified plastic surgeon and speak to patients he has operated on, rather than be influenced by clips online that give false impression­s.”

They say: I want my face to be perfect like hers. I tell the patients: No, I can’t do that for you, these images are all photoshopp­ed, retouched and makeup is used to hide the marks and scaring.” Dr Leon Alexandar, Surgeon, Universal Hospitals Abu Dhabi

 ??  ?? People should not fall for physicians and companies who promote themselves on social media, particular­ly those who use photos and clips of procedures, say doctors.
People should not fall for physicians and companies who promote themselves on social media, particular­ly those who use photos and clips of procedures, say doctors.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates