Often articles about cosmetic surgeries like liposuction, breast implants, and nose jobs do not cleary describe inherent risks, a Canadian study has shown.
Often articles about cosmetic surgeries like liposuction, breast implants, and nose jobs do not cleary describe inherent risks, a Canadian study has shown.
Surgery is portrayed as part of a "normal" beauty regime in best-selling North American women's magazines, in stories alongside clothing and diet advice, researcher Andrea Polonijo told AFP.While the physical risks of surgery were sometimes reported, emotional risks were mentioned in only 18 percent of stories, said Polonijo.
Her research at the University of British Columbia, and co-authored by her sociology professor Richard Carpiano, was published in the December issue of Women's Health Issues journal.
Research is ongoing into "whether cosmetic surgery has positive or negative effects on emotional well-being," said Polonijo, and consensus is lacking about whether surgery causes psychological distress, or "women undergoing cosmetic surgery might be predisposed to that already."
But Polonijo said some studies suggest "anxiety and depression can be emphasized and general body dissatisfaction can actually increase after cosmetic surgery."
"Some studies linked (having) breast implants with increased risk of psychological problems and suicide," she said.
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"These magazines are promising an emotional health boost and that's not necessarily going to be the outcome," said Polonijo. "They might want to consider presenting a more balanced view."
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In the United States, the American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery reported an increase of eight percent in cosmetic surgeries in 2007, to nearly 1.5 procedures. Liposuction was the most popular.
The numbers of cosmetic surgery procedures in Canada are not tracked.
Source-AFP
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