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| Lauren
Weil, a senior from Montgomery, Ala., poses wearing her black
size A bra that fit before her breast enhancement two years
ago. She now wears a size C cup. Weil said that the first
time she thought of getting the surgery was when she picked
up a pamphlet in the doctor's office. (SHAUNA INTELISANO *
The Red & Black) |
Cosmetic surgery is
routinely performed on University students, some of whom will
use any method to obtain the perfect body. "It
is common for us to perform cosmetic surgery on college age students,"
said Dr. Jamie Parker, of the Center for Plastic Surgery, located
in Athens.
"Students
are away from home and on their own for the first time and will
often investigate options to correct areas they may not be happy
with," he said.
Parker said
the most popular procedures for college age males are liposuction,
otoplasty (surgery of the ear) and rhinoplasty procedures (surgery
of the nose).
For college age
females, the most customary procedures are breast augmentation,
liposuction and rhinoplasty.
Lauren Weil, a senior
from Montgomery, Ala., had rhinoplasty and breast enhancement
surgery in March 2002.
Weil originally met
with Dr. John Hartley Jr. in Atlanta to reconstruct her broken
nose.
While inside of his
office, Weil said, she picked up a pamphlet containing information
on breast enhancement surgery. "I
was small -- I was very small, but I never thought about it until
I looked at the pamphlet," Weil said.
"We took
pictures and he had me go out and find pictures of what I thought
I wanted, and I did it and I do not regret a bit of it," she said.
Weil said
the procedure increased her from a size 36A to a 36C.
"I can fit
into my clothes, it made my waist look smaller, my body looks
proportional. I have more confidence," she said.
Breast enhancement
surgery carries risks and concerns such as losing sensitivity
in the nipple area, the issue of future breast feeding and possible
permanent scarring, Weil said.
"I actually
gained sensitivity; I can breast-feed if I ever have a baby,"
Weil said. "There is only really small scars underneath. You can't
even see them in a bikini."
Dr. James
Moore of the Moore Center for Plastic Surgery on Prince Avenue
said only a few of his breast enhancement recipients stay overnight
in the hospital.
The first
two days are the most painful but, he said, after a week they
are driving, and after four weeks they can engage in full, unrestricted
activity.
"After surgery
there were two days that were moderate (in pain), not even bad,"
Weil said. "I didn't even take the pills. I had knee surgery;
that was pain."
Moore said
he turns possible cosmetic surgery candidates away if he believes
their motivation or thought process is in the wrong place.
"The notion
that anybody who has a pulse and a VISA card is a candidate for
plastic surgery is just not right," he said. "If somebody wants
to look like someone on TV, or if someone thinks this change,
whatever it may be, will get them a job or get them a boyfriend
or girlfriend, that is really the wrong signal.
"This is
not like carving wood or stone, I can't tell you that you are
going to have Elvis Presley's nose," Moore said.
Art Brady,
a junior from Atlanta, said when he sees a woman with breast implants
he immediately thinks they had surgery for the wrong reason.
"If they
did it thinking it is going to make them more attractive, or to
get guys, that is ridiculous," he said.
Moore and
Weil said they both agreed on the correct motivation factor for
cosmetic surgery.
"The whole
issue of motivation for this has been given a lot of press and
a lot of inquiry. The motivation has to come from within," Moore
said. "The person can't be doing it to satisfy someone else. I
consider it almost an extension of their lifestyle."
"You have
to do it for yourself," Weil said.
While the
breast enhancement procedure is very common, the breast reduction
surgery is more popular in Moore's practice.
"Some of
our younger women who have breast reduction said they feel self-
conscious and feel overweight even though they may not be," Moore
said.
"Having that
surgery and bringing their breast size back into proportion to
their frame can be a transforming experience," he said. "They
sit up straighter, they feel better, they do more things."
Parker said
that for many women, breast reduction surgery is covered by health
insurance.
Morgan Ward,
a senior from Marietta, said she has seen friends go through breast
reduction and breast enhancement procedures.
"I think
for the girls that had the reduction, I think everyone accepts
that and is supportive," Ward said. "But for the girls who get
implants, when there is a huge difference, that is when other
girls talked about them behind their back."
Weil said
she's confident with her decision.
"I am happy
that I did it," she said.
Moore and
Weil both agreed that cosmetic surgery has potential to raise
self-esteem and boost confidence, but Brady said that changing
a person's physical appearance does not change the person.
"It doesn't
matter what you do on the outside -- it's still the same person.
The inside is what counts," Brady said.
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