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Ethnic Differences in Cosmetic Surgery Found, According to N.Y. Times

ethnic differences in cosmetic surgeryA recent  New York Times article reports that different nationalities are choosing cosmetic surgery that is “tailored to their cultural preferences and ideals of beauty” and finds there are procedure trends within different ethnic groups.

“When a patient comes in from a certain ethnic background and of a certain age, we know what they’re going to be looking for. We are sort of amateur sociologists,” said Dr. Kaveh Alizadeh, of Long Island Plastic Surgical Group.

Ethnic trends doctors interviewed for the story reported seeing include the following:

  • Egyptians are getting face lifts.
  • Iranians favor nose jobs.
  • Dominicans are getting buttocks lifts.
  • Russian women favor breast augmentation.

Cosmetic surgery has been increasing in popularity within ethnic groups in the United States in recent years. A 2010 survey by the American Academy of Cosmetic Surgery revealed that more than half of the respondents thought the popularity of cosmetic surgery had grown among members of their racial/ethnic group in the last five years.

According to Victoria Pitts-Taylor, a sociology professor at Queens College, motivations for ethnic cosmetic procedures seem to have changed. She said that in the early days of cosmetic surgery immigrants underwent procedures to try to look “more American.”

Today many immigrants have procedures that reflect their home culture’s trends, rather than trying to fit in or assimilate in the U.S.

“My patients are proud of looking Hispanic,” said Dr. Jeffrey Yager, whose office is in a largely Dominican neighborhood in Manhattan. “I don’t get the patients who want to obscure their ethnicity.”

One Dominican patient of Dr. Yager’s is Italia Vigniero, 27, who got breast implants in 2008 and is considering a buttocks lift. “We Latinas define ourselves with our bodies,” she said. “We always have curves.”

The doctors said that in addition to their own cultures, immigrants are also influenced by U.S. pop culture and reality TV shows about cosmetic surgery.

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