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Breast Buddies
Hi and welcome to Breast Buddies Forum!

As a guest you're more than welcome to browse the forums and get information about breast augmentation surgery. We feel that everyone deserves to look and feel their best, and all are welcome to have a look around! However some forums are hidden and some aren't available to guests, so you're more than welcome to join up and join in to fully take advantage of all the site has to offer.

Why Register?

• Keep up to date with the latest surgery news
• Chat to friendly girls who've been through the op
• See pictures of real life patients
• Get advice on implant types, sizes, shapes, placements and more
• Ask our resident BAAPS surgeons
• Get your own boob job diary and calendar events
• Get your countdown ticker to your special day
• Access members-only forums

Plus more... much more!

Use the buttons below to register or log in.

Thanks for visiting and talk you soon!
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Plastic is fantastic

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Plastic is fantastic Empty Plastic is fantastic

Post by COOKIE 27th January 2013, 10:33 am

It’s not the end of the affair by any means, but our lust for cosmetic surgery finally seems to be cooling.

New figures from the British Association of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons (BAAPS), to be released tomorrow, show demand for procedures plateaued last year.

It’s the first time there hasn’t been a large increase in more than a decade.

Procedures plateauing: For the first time in over a decade there was not a large increase in the number of plastic surgery procedures

TEARS AND TURMOIL
In 2012, 43,172 cosmetic operations (a year-on-year rise of 0.2 per cent) were carried out by BAAPS surgeons. While the plunge some had predicted did not materialise, it was far from a vintage year for the nip/tuck industry.

The Wild West approach of some High Street providers – the two-for-one offers, hard-selling and rock-bottom prices BAAPS has campaigned against – came back to bite them, with the PIP breast-implant scandal.

'He wanted a woman half my age, now I do everything to keep young': Wives of plastic surgeons reveal addiction to free surgery

Teacher called a 'zombie' after her face became paralysed smiles again... thanks to op using a muscle from her leg

It emerged that thousands of British women – and up to half a million worldwide – had been given shoddily made implants that leaked and contained industrial-grade silicone.

One major chain went into administration, while others squabbled over whether they’d offer to replace the faulty goods free of charge. Some claimed they hadn’t even kept records of whether they’d used PIPs, let alone known they were faulty, despite alarm bells ringing as far back as 2010.

Patients were left terrified, with many claiming to be suffering the horrendous symptoms of poisoning, while doctors still can’t agree if there really is any health risk.

Shoddy surgery: Thousands of British women were given PIP implants which contained industrial-grade silicone and leaked

Ever-innovative clinics claimed women would opt for more ‘natural’ options, such as sucking fat out of the tummy or thighs, then injecting it into the bust. However, according to the BAAPS report, the most popular cosmetic procedure was still traditional breast augmentation, with numbers dipping by just 1.6 per cent to 9,854.

As BAAPS president Rajiv Grover says: ‘The desire for larger breasts is centuries-old. Scandals come and go – in this case, the cause was an isolated case of criminal manufacturing practices. This has made women anxious but breast augmentation remains a very safe operation.’

Men seem happier with what nature has given them, with an overall 4 per cent decline in numbers seeking surgery.

There was an 18 per cent drop in ‘moob jobs’ – where fat is removed from wobbly chests – although it remained the third most popular male procedure behind nose ops (rhinoplasty) and eye-lifts (blepharoplasty).

In fact, body-contouring surgery, including liposuction and tummy tucks, continues to fall out of favour. BAAPS say it could be due to an Olympic-inspired interest in getting fit as a way to a better body. However, an alternative explanation is the boom in non-surgical options for fat reduction – devices that emit either laser, heat or ultrasound waves – that genuinely work.

Under the knife: Facelifts increased by 13 per cent for women
Perhaps the biggest surprise was the resurgence of that grande dame of plastic surgery, the facelift. In total, 5,324 women had one last year, along with 306 men – a rise of 13 and 14 per cent respectively.

Forget Joan Rivers, Sharon Osbourne and those other brides of Franken-surgeon. The new idol is former Conservative MP and chick-lit author Louise Mensch, 41, with her ‘has-she-or-hasn’t-she?’ facelift.

Surgeons are no longer indiscriminately hoicking up the cheeks and reattaching them to the back of the head, a method that may or may not have been used on the brilliant Joan, 79.

These new operations use small incisions, minor lifts, just a few stitches . . . you’ll still look like you, only younger.

Another unexpected development is the 19 per cent year-on-year increase in men having brow-lifts, with 149 choosing the procedure.

In an economic downturn, making sure you look fresher, fitter and less redundant than the next chap can pay dividends.

Of course, the BAAPS figures don’t give a complete picture. While BAAPS carries out stringent checks to ensure its members are highly qualified, they represent only 230 surgeons in Britain. Hundreds more operate at cowboy clinics, offering the cheapest deals.

Just last week, it transpired a number of these doctors were fly-in, fly-out foreign surgeons, who operate then leave the country. Many aren’t insured here, so are unaccountable should thing go wrong.

As the recession bites and the frown-lines deepen, will more women and men opt to chance it with these dodgy operators?

I’d like to think we are wiser than that. But the allure of a bargain is just as strong as the desire for perkier breasts or a more youthful face.

I’m sure these are sentiments we can all relate to, even if it doesn’t mean we’ll end up at the sharp end of a surgeon’s knife.

Source HERE


Just last week, it transpired a number of these doctors were fly-in, fly-out foreign surgeons, who operate then leave the country. Many aren’t insured here, so are unaccountable should thing go wrong.

I've been suspect of this for a while now and if you are allocated a surgeon by one the larger commercial clinics and can find no previous comments about them online then as we have always advised here on Breast Buddies it would probably be best to continue with your search for a surgeon... Some may be genuine and just new to the field here in the UK. But I personally wouldn't be willing to take that chance. Most clinics relinquish all responsibility if you get at absolute bodge job that can't can't be fixed and in small print the responsibility for your procedure is with the surgeon and not the clinic. So if you do want to sue and the surgeon isn't insured..... Well, I don't think I need say more.

Do be VERY careful girls. BAAPS are doing their best to highlight these people s now. They tried hard to get people to listen about PIPS too before that hit the headlines, so do listen to them now girls. There's really no such thing as a 'Bargain Boob-Job' never 'settle' for what you can afford 'right now' if you want the best for your body... Save more and wait a little longer and get the best... For your own sake. Xxx
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Plastic is fantastic Empty Re: Plastic is fantastic

Post by dove 27th January 2013, 10:51 am

You couldn't have put it any better cookie...i went with mybreast and despite some people trying to haggle prices with other companies, i was happy to pay what i was quoted as I've got a fantastic surgeon with a great track record who is a member of BAAPS .
Bargain boob jobs...please remember this is surgery and your health and safety is not something to be bartered and put at risk.
Choose wisely and research your surgeon fully and ALWAYS read the small print x x
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