Plasticos Foundation

Buddhists have a saying that expresses the essence of Plasticos Foundations' philosophy: Give me a fish, and I eat for a day. Teach me to fish, and I eat for a lifetime. In accordance with this philosophy, Plasticos team members often work under difficult and primitive conditions correcting deformities such as cleft, cleft palate, hair lip, hare lip, webbed hands or feet, burn scars, tumors, etc. And of equal or even greater importance, as they operate, they simultaneously train local surgeons, anesthesiologists and nurses in reconstructive surgical techniques and patient care, so their work can continue long after the team has gone.

MISSION STATEMENT

To provide reconstructive plastic surgical training and care to those in need, regardless of their ability to pay, and to advance the field of Plastic Surgery through education and research.

GOALS

To improve the lives of others through Plastic Surgery, we will provide direct reconstructive plastic surgical care worldwide, primarily to children in need. Through our intervention, we will enhance the lives of those with correctable deformities. Whenever possible we will train and assist surgeons in host countries in the art of Plastic Surgery, enabling them to carry on this work. We seek to advance the field of Plastic Surgery through training, research, and public education. To this end, we will establish host-country medical alliances, domestic patient care and educational programs.

VALUES

We believe all individuals, especially the young, negatively affected by correctable deformities deserve to be made whole. Through direct care, training, research and public education, we will use kids plastic surgery as the reconstructive vehicle to mold and shape these lives. We believe that we enrich our own lives in direct proportion to how much we benefit those less fortunate than ourselves and empower others to do the same.

Silicone Breast Implants Video: Absolutely Safe?

Silicone Breast Implants: I received promotional materials for a movie 'Absolutely Safe', a documentary film about problems with silicone breast implants.

The information about this is lengthy but I've include three promotional videos that deal with testimony about silicon breast implants before the FDA in 2003, ruptured implants, and a plastic surgeon discussing failure rates and removal of implants.

Plastic Surgeon on Silicone Breast Implants

Every year, more and more women and teenagers in the U.S. are choosing to receive breast implants.

The American Society of Plastic Surgeons reports that last year nearly 400,000 women in the U.S. received breast implants. Yet amidst this booming industry lies a complex story of questionable regulation and research, health risks, and women determined to do anything to have the "perfect" breasts. Do women considering implants know about the risks? Are manufacturers and the medical community providing women with all of the facts necessary in order to provide "informed consent?" Today, this procedure has become so popular that high school teenagers receive implants as graduation presents, however few consumers, physicians or regulators are asking whether these medical devices are as safe as the FDA purports them to be.

On November 17th, the New York Times published an article reporting on a letter to congress from a group of FDA scientists accusing top FDA officials of engaging in "serious misconduct" by tampering with the approval process of medical devices. Breast implants are classified as medical devices.

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Plastic Surgery vs. Dermatology Residency

Plastic Surgery and Dermagology residencies are still hot. In fact, they're getting hotter as more young doctors look at the options available to them after graduation.

According to a recently released report, plastic surgery and dermatology are the most competitive specialties among medical students awaiting appointments to residency programs, reports the New York Times.

According to a report by the Washington-based Association of American Medical Colleges and the National Resident Matching Program, only 61 percent of seniors at American medical schools whose first choice was dermatology received a residency in that field last year. Compare that figure with 98 percent for those seeking internal medicine and 99 percent for family medicine.

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Plastic surgery recession vs. vanity?

The economy sucks, discretionary spending is down, and now begin the reports of a plastic surgery recession.

Of course, the talking heads have been wrong before. The press only runs two stories... ever.

How great something is. And then, how we've just found out that what we thought was great really sucks.

Here's an example of a story on the start of a plastic surgery recession via MSNBC:

The bad economy is causing some faces to fall, and Botox is no longer an option for lifting them.

Plastic surgeons are the latest to report their bubble has burst.

The "New York Times" reports fewer tummies are getting tucked and buttock implants have bottomed out.

When the American Society of Plastic Surgeons surveyed its members, some 62-percent reported performing fewer procedures in the first half of this year.

Some purveyors of surgical perfection admitted they're now letting some patients negotiate fees.

Both fashion and medical experts who study the industry agree that austerity is making a comeback.

More people now worry more about mortgage payments than cellulite.

One analyst reported a 30-to-40 percent drop in business in image-obsessed Or ange County, California.

Faces frozen from Botox injections have gone the way of overpriced SUVs, expert say, while wrinkles are the new black

Of course, they may be correct. But, then again, cosmetic plastic surgeons are in the vanity business, and vanity is as constant as the Northern Star.

Now comes word from The Wall Street Journal that plastic surgery is having a recession heyday!

"Vanity appears to be trumping frugality in a looks-conscious society," reads the fist line of a piece titled "Keeping Up Appearances in a Downturn."

It goes on to say that plastic surgeons reported an increased demand this fall for minimally invasive procedures. (O.K., so the two newspapers agree on actual face lifts.)

"Things are so bad [in financial markets] that investments aren't even worthwhile anymore, so people are investing in themselves," the paper quotes an Omaha-based dermatologist, who treats a patient named Maralyn Barr.

Ms. Barr lost her job in June as a district sales manager for bookstore chain Borders Group Inc. She is $140,000 in debt from her 22-year-old daughter's education. She has cut back on eating out and other lavish spending, but not her Restylane and Botox injections. "It's like comfort food," she said.

Huh? Botox and Restylane instead of real food? As I said, vanity is as constant as the Northern Star.

Thermage: Do plastic surgeons hate everything non-surgical?

First, I'll state that I like Thermage.

But plasticized raises the questions that have been haunting Thermage since the early days.

thermage.jpgThermage is a radiofrequency device that is meant to create skin tightening and collagen remodeling. It takes multiple treatments to acheive desired results, and is somewhat uncomfortable.

There seems to be a growing consensus among surgeons that Thermage is not everything they hoped it would be. When looking at a presentation by the medical device company that sells Thermage, it is at times difficult to distinguish between the before and after images. We have to strain our eyes to tell the difference (see here). Also, issues with fat atrophy and scarring have surfaced.

The issues story about Thermage fat atropy and scarring that plasticized points to:.

"I was shocked and dismayed over the scars that resulted from this reportedly safe and non-invasive procedure,” said thermage patient, Laurie.

Thanks to White, Laurie doesn't appear to be disfigured. At first glance, you can't tell she suffered second-degree burns to her neck. It's taken her two years of reconstructive procedures, but today she hopes White can hide her last remaining scars.

 Of course my account rep Chris addressed these questions with me just last week. I've invited Chris to submit some posts and rise up to defend Thermage's name. He's said that he'll check with corporate to see if they'll let him.

Plastic Surgery & Teens.

From Australia: Teens want bigger boobs.

10N_COSMETIC_narrowweb__300x453,0.jpg

Darryl Hodgkinson, a cosmetic surgeon for 26 years, says he is treating more teenagers now than he did a decade ago — between 3 and 5 per cent of his patients are teenagers.

There are "psychological consequences of having a real physical deformity like a really big, fat bottom". Surgery such as liposuction to remove fat that won't budge with exercise and diet can help adolescents with a negative self-image suffering extreme social distress, he says. His price starts at $5000 and his youngest liposuction patient was 15.

Dr Bruce Fox, a Melbourne cosmetic surgeon of 25 years, operates on about six adolescents a year. Last year he had a patient who was 17. This year he has performed liposuction on an 18-year-old. He says it is not a weight loss technique, but a procedure to correct a body shape that might be "size eight up top and 10 or 12 downstairs".

How not to handle plastic surgery malpractice pubicity.

My Surgery Nightmare: An unhappy patient takes on her plastic surgeon.

ggbae_(2).jpgPlastic surgeons are among, if not the most, likely physician objects of malpractice claims. And when patients want to punish you, they now have resouces. Case in point; mysurgerynightmare.com.

The reasoning is simple. Where an unwanted outcome in cardio-thorasic surgery is marked off as a given possibility, people who are looking at plastic surgery don't have the same expectation of risk. Cosmetic treatments are viewed as flawless and doctors often minimize the possibility of an unwanted outcome.

A poor result strikes directly at a patients ego and perception of self. Not something you want to damage and remain friends.The

The level of communication and networking now available on the web gives anyounparalledled access to spreading their views.

From the site:  

***UPDATE: Dr. Sykes tried to force me to take down this website by suing me for defamation. On January 26th, 2007 the California Court of Appeal unanimously ruled that Dr. Sykes' claims had no merit.  The Court found that my website contributed to the public debate regarding plastic surgery.  The Court also said that the statements on my website regarding Dr. Sykes were either true or were matters of opinion.  It said Dr. Sykes was unable to show that there was any false information on this website.  Since the Court of Appeal ruled in my favor, Dr. Sykes and his attorney have continued claiming that my website is misleading.  But the Court considered and rejected all of their arguments.

And there's this:

In a sworn deposition on October 26, 2004 it was asked of Dr. Sykes if he's ever been a defendant in any other medical malpractice lawsuits.  His answer was "I think three others."

The fact is Dr. Jonathan Sykes has  MANY medical malpractice lawsuits filed against him.

Medical malpractice lawsuits* were filed against Dr. Sykes on  9/9/2005 ,  7/21/2005,  4/12/2005,  7/12/04,  5/25/2004,  12/01/2003, 12/11/2002,  4/15/2002,  12/12/2001,  8/18/2000 and 11/14/1991.

 Does Dr. Sykes really want eveyone to know that he was sued three seperate times in 2005?

Certainly there is widespread distain for all things legal among physicians. Just take a look over at Kevin MD where there's continual back and forth among docs and malpractice attorneys. 

Part of the problem is the inherent conflict of interest in plastic surgery and other elective procedures. Where a doc in an ER is not choosing patients and is generally on salary, a cosmetic plastic surgeon is performing and elective procedure and benefiting directly from the payment.

Ah, there's the rub.

Lip augmentation gone Frankenstein!

Misadventures in lip augmentation.

"Pop star Pete Burns revealed today he is suing his plastic surgeon for "wrecking his career and life".

Burns, singer with 1980s pop band Dead or Alive, has had several cosmetic procedures on his face and is suing a Harley Street surgeon for an estimated £1million over a botched attempt to remove lip implants.

In an exclusive interview he told the Standard he looked like he had been "mutilated with a Stanley knife" after surgery to correct the original problems left his top lip hanging off...

Burns said: "It has taken away my life and my career. I saw doctors in London who said the only option was to amputate my lips. I was suicidal."

In 2000 Burns went to Dr Maurizio Viel at the London Centre for Aesthetic Surgery to have a lip implant removed.

lips250107_243x205.jpgBut instead of having the original implant taken out, he was injected with a filler called Evolution and then later with another called Outline.

Despite complications, Dr Viel persisted and injected more of the substance - only for the problems to escalate, causing swelling, blisters, discharge and lumps.

Eventually the singer was left so disfigured he could not eat normally, could only drink through a straw and did not leave his house for months."
Lip augmentation is still a proceedure that has risks. Lip amputation?

 
In Park City, we perform a lot of fillers, but in any normal situation, we avoid the permanent ones like Silikon 1000. There are docs that use this stuff like it was apple juice just because it's cheap and they can charge more for 'permanent fillers'.

It's not always just the cost or how much you can make. Putting a patient at increased risk just to save money or charge more for a treatment is not ethical behavior. 

Hat tip: Plastic Surgery 101 

Plastic Surgery: Patient Lotteries

_40828810_implant203.jpgPlastic surgons are, 'appalled at this new scheme but unfortunately not surprised'.

Plastic surgeons have criticised a company for running the world's first cosmetic surgery "superdraw".

The British Association of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons (BAAPS) accused Europa International of "plumbing new depths".

It said the company was using marketing gimmicks to attract customers to surgery abroad.

But John Babbage, co-founder of the Prague-based company, said there was no difference between somebody winning surgery, and paying for it.

People are encouraged to enter the company's draw via text or phone through a section on their website entitled "win your surgery for just £1.50".

The monthly draw gives people in the UK the chance of winning £6,000 towards cosmetic surgery.

Hat tip to Kevin MD 

American Academy of Cosmetic Surgery wins in California.

3565666346616.jpgAs acknowledged by the American Board of Cosmetic Surgery and affirmed by the Superior Court of California, cosmetic surgeons include qualified physicians from the fields of Dermatololgy, Facial Plastic-ENT surgery, Oculoplastic surgery, General Plastic Surgery, Oral Maxillo-Facial Surgery, and General Surgery.

Via: Plasticized

The Academy has reported, via e-mail and through Newsline, the recent victory in California for cosmetic surgeons, whereby the Superior Court of California ordered the Medical Board of California to grant ABCS's Application for specialty board certification. This decision was recently challenged by the Medical Board, which filed a Motion for a New Trial.

...The ABCS allows for cosmetic surgeons, including ENT's, Oculoplastic surgeons, and cosmetic dermatologists to have certification for the specialized skills in which they are trained. Certification through ABCS is often acheived through fellowship training in cosmetic surgery, which occurs after a residency in a surgical specialty.

and Edward Lack MD isn't mincing words when he says..  

"I would hope this will end the dispute once and for all and stop the needless waste of money and time over what is only a turf battle. As the number of board certified plastic surgeons who join the American Academy of Cosmetic Surgery and take board exams from the American Board of Cosmetic Surgery increases, the obstructionists who often hide their identities in the American Society of Plastic Surgery will lose more and more prestige as the public views them as the self-seeking propagandists that they are."

Gore (Gortex) throws in the plastic surgery towel.

Gore & Associates to Exit the Plastic Surgery Market

 This exit includes ...'all of the GORE Subcutaneous Augmentation Material (GORE S.A.M.) products including TRIMENSIONAL 3-D implant extended chin, nasal dorsum and malar, sheets, sutures for plastic surgery applications, facial slings and strands.'

Obviously the risk / reward ratio wasn't working for them.

Plastic Surgery Celebrity Photos: The good, bad, and ugly of celebrity surgical results.

Brazil.jpg&sig=__KxLqaxhl5uy90WoMow-HI-uyu2A=I stumbled upon this vicious celebrity plastic surgery web site. It's no great wonder why the paparazzi are so loathed. It makes you feel sorry for these poor celebrities.

What's more surprising is that even plastic surgeons get nasty and call it "entertainment".

blockquote.gifI am a Board Certified Plastic Surgeon who has been featured on Dr. 90210 on E! The comments on the site are my opinion alone and should not be taken as fact. I have not treated any of the celebrities presented here and the information and opinions should be taken for entertainment value only.

Entertainment value? I'm stunned that this guy has any patients. This is truly base.

Warning: If you're a plastic surgeon in LA let's hope you don't see one of your patients.

Botox, Face Lifts, & Politics

26looks.1.190.jpgFrom the NY Times: Botox and politics don't mix.

What was especially intriguing about Mr. Spencer’s off-the-cuff remarks, as reported in The Daily News, was his speculation that Mrs. Clinton had evolved from an ugly duckling to the presentable 59-year-old woman she is today with the help of “millions of dollars” of “work.”

And if she had: Would it matter?

With Americans spending $12 billion a year getting injected, stapled and snipped, cosmetic surgery long ago went mainstream. Yet there is one arena in which an accusation of having work done still stings, and that is in politics.

 And male politicians aren't immune from Botox prosecution:

In the 2004 presidential election, when it was suggested that John Kerry had undergone Botox injections to wipe away facial lines, the Democratic candidate did his best to furrow his brow and declare such talk nonsense. (No matter, his critics said, since he was guilty of something much worse: looking French.)

Florida Bill Limiting Satellite Offices & Medical Spa Procedures Passes

The law also restricts operation of a satellite office--only dermatologists
and plastic surgeons can perform Botox, medical microdermabrasion, chemical
peels and laser rejuvenation treatment.
That means primary care physicians
and other doctors can only perform esthetic services in their primary
offices.
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