New York Post

MY COVID MAKEOVER

New Yorkers hiding secret plastic surgery under masks

- By DOREE LEWAK

Between social distancing and continued closures, New York City can feel limiting. But there’s one group of locals who have found freedom in wearing masks.

“I probably would have put getting my neck tightened on hold if I didn’t have the mask,” said Maggie, 34, who asked that her last name be withheld. “I don’t need everyone talking about it.” The stay-athome mom from Long Island had the procedure done on Thursday and says that, normally, she would have had to come up with excuses for avoiding her friends so they wouldn’t see the telltale wounds.

Multiple patients told The Post that the obligatory mask has been the biggest benefit of getting work done now, even leading those on the fence about getting a nose job or facelift to go ahead.

“I had been thinking about it for a long time. The mask was a bonus,” said Aja Carthon, a 24-yearold teacher from Stuyvesant Heights who had a $20,000 rhinoplast­y and chin-implant procedure last month. “I definitely would not have been sociable if it weren’t for the mask. But I did coffee and dinner with friends, I went to a backyard party . . . no one suspected anything.”

Upper East Side facial plastic surgeon Dr. Jennifer Levine has seen several patients motivated by masking up.

“It allows people to have a seamless recovery — they don’t have to hide,” she said. “It makes them feel a lot less self-conscious entering the healing process knowing they’re not on display.”

Once doctors’ offices reopened over this summer after a forced city shutdown, plastic surgeons could hardly keep up with demand for nips and tucks for months. A New York City doctor told The Post that in July, he recorded his busiest month in his nine years of practice.

Dr. Stafford Broumand, a Park Avenue-based plastic surgeon, said he has seen double the interest for neck liposuctio­n — starting at $5,000 — in the past three months.

“Face-lifts, neck skin tightening, fat grafting, Botox . . . You can walk around town with a mask without anyone knowing,” he told The Post.

Erica DeOliveira, who had a nose job and injections done over the summer, even found a way to use the mask for Zoom meetings: She left her house and took her laptop to a nearby park. “I was able to hide from everyone,” said the 40-year-old marketing executive from the Upper East Side. “My mom didn’t even know I had the procedures.”

She fessed up a few weeks later when she visited her folks in New Jersey sans mask and they started looking over old family photos.

“My mother kept looking at the pictures and back at me and finally said, ‘You look different.’ ”

 ??  ?? COVER UP: Aja Carthon (above) got a $20,000 rhinoplast­y and chin implant in August, then used the benefit of mask-wearing (below) to conceal post-op bruising and swelling. AFTER
COVER UP: Aja Carthon (above) got a $20,000 rhinoplast­y and chin implant in August, then used the benefit of mask-wearing (below) to conceal post-op bruising and swelling. AFTER
 ??  ?? BEFORE
BEFORE
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