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Rise In Breast Augmentations Among Young Women

More and more young women are seeking plastic surgery to perfect features of their faces and bodies which they are unhappy with. While celebrities set a high standard for beauty in America, they themselves are not always happy with their features. This day in age almost all young women even in their teens have at least thought about plastic surgery. While rhinoplasty remains the most common cosmetic procedure among teenagers, doctors are now performing other procedures such as breast implants, liposuction, and tummy tuck Boston experts say, on young women.

Boston Cosmetic Surgeons as well as in Los Angeles, New York, Miami, & other major U.S. cities attribute the rise of these types of surgeries to the enormous popularity of reality TV shows & websites which promote and sometimes glamorize cosmetic procedures, making plastic surgery not as much of a taboo as it was in past decades. Breast implants Boston surgeons say, as well as liposuction are now given by parents as graduation or birthday gifts. Some doctors say they have performed breast augmentations on mothers and their daughters at the same time.

Although there is no law against performing implant surgery on patients younger than 18, many surgeons refuse to do so in part because girls may still be developing. Sometimes doctors will perform the surgery in severe asymmetry cases or in an older teenager who has no breast development. Boston breast augmentation surgeons often say that young girls are also not mature enough to understand the long-term effects of having such a physically altering procedure.

"At 18, girls really don't know what they're doing," said Scott L. Spear, president of the ASPS and the chief of plastic surgery at Georgetown University Hospital. Many do not "realize it's more than just having your ears pierced."

The most important factor that goes into a surgeons decision on whether to operate on a patient or not is to assess them individually in order to ensure they are a healthy candidate and have realistic expectations. Maturity comes into play in patients young and old. If a patient is seeking surgery in order to please someone else, or to improve their life, or as a quick fix to a deeper emotional or psychological problem, good surgeons will tend to categorize those as inappropriate candidates for cosmetic surgery.

More and more young women are seeking plastic surgery to perfect features of their faces and bodies which they are unhappy with. While celebrities set a high standard for beauty in America, they themselves are not always happy with their features. This day in age almost all young women even in their teens have at least thought about plastic surgery. While rhinoplasty remains the most common cosmetic procedure among teenagers, doctors are now performing other procedures such as breast implants, liposuction, and tummy tuck Boston experts say, on young women.

Boston Cosmetic Surgeons as well as in Los Angeles, New York, Miami, & other major U.S. cities attribute the rise of these types of surgeries to the enormous popularity of reality TV shows & websites which promote and sometimes glamorize cosmetic procedures, making plastic surgery not as much of a taboo as it was in past decades. Breast implants Boston surgeons say, as well as liposuction are now given by parents as graduation or birthday gifts. Some doctors say they have performed breast augmentations on mothers and their daughters at the same time.

Although there is no law against performing implant surgery on patients younger than 18, many surgeons refuse to do so in part because girls may still be developing. Sometimes doctors will perform the surgery in severe asymmetry cases or in an older teenager who has no breast development. Boston breast augmentation surgeons often say that young girls are also not mature enough to understand the long-term effects of having such a physically altering procedure.

"At 18, girls really don't know what they're doing," said Scott L. Spear, president of the ASPS and the chief of plastic surgery at Georgetown University Hospital. Many do not "realize it's more than just having your ears pierced."

The most important factor that goes into a surgeons decision on whether to operate on a patient or not is to assess them individually in order to ensure they are a healthy candidate and have realistic expectations. Maturity comes into play in patients young and old. If a patient is seeking surgery in order to please someone else, or to improve their life, or as a quick fix to a deeper emotional or psychological problem, good surgeons will tend to categorize those as inappropriate candidates for cosmetic surgery.

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