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More People 65 And Older Getting Cosmetic Surgery
She
feels she won a second chance at life, so she decided to give her
face a second chance, too. York
underwent a five-hour face-lift in June in Beverly Hills, Calif., to
erase some wrinkles and shave off a few years. Her
husband is supportive, but said, "I love her as is." She
says she did it for herself. "Don't get me wrong. I don't want
to look 16 again," she said, "but I also don't want to
look like Damon's mother." Experts
say thousands of men and women 65 and older are getting plastic
surgery. They want to feel young and attractive, and battle age
discrimination. Since
1997, the number of cosmetic procedures for Americans 65 and older
jumped from nearly 121,000 to more than 425,000 last year. Dr.
Sheldon Sevinor, a plastic surgeon based in Boston, said he had at
least 30 patients last year who are older than 70. "We're
living longer and feeling more vital," he said. "Age 40
today is what age 30 used to be like." He
recently performed breast enlargement surgery on an 82-year-old
Boston woman, his oldest patient to have the procedure. "She's
healthy, she's spunky and she wanted to look how she felt," he
said. Leland
Preble, 73, from Burlington, Mass., is planning to have his eyelids
lifted by Sevinor. "I'm
proud of my age, but when I have an eye exam, they have to pull my
eyelids up so they can take the test," he said. "Gravity's
too strong." Harry
R. Moody, former head of the Brookdale Center on Aging at New York's
Hunter College, said a little narcissism is healthy. "Women
want to be noticed and not seen as frail old ladies," he said.
"It's the same kind of thing for men." Moody
said some elderly people feel they have to dye their hair or get
plastic surgery to convince employers they're still able to do their
job as well as someone younger. "People
need to keep their jobs and they'll do what they feel they need to
do," he said. "It's sometimes used as a workplace defence
mechanism. It can be a costly one, too." A
face-lift can cost as much as $25,000 US. But
no matter the price tag, interest in cosmetic surgery has increased
recently, and liposuction is the most common surgery. Plastic
surgeons say health risks for all procedures are relatively low as
long as the patient is in good health, but those older than 65 will
take longer to heal. In
Hazel York's case, her surgery went well, though she had mild pain
and was swollen afterward. But she says she feels great now. "My
neck is especially great. I'm just tickled with the way it turned
out," she said. Dr.
John Grossman, who performed York's surgery and runs cosmetic
surgery clinics in Denver and Beverly Hills, Calif., said he has had
many patients her age. "Hazel's
a perfect example that chronologic age doesn't have to relate to how
you feel about yourself. Just because you're 80 doesn't mean you
have to look and feel like it," he said. But
Grossman also says a new look doesn't mean a new life. "Our
society prizes youth as opposed to other cultures where the value
and respect is on age and wisdom," he said. "You're always
competing with someone younger. But getting a face-lift doesn't make
you more qualified for a job." Leni
Marshall, chairwoman of the 2002-2002 Aging and Ageism Caucus for
the National Women's Studies Association, said though she
understands why plastic surgery is so popular, it devalues age. "There
is a lot of emphasis on people's bodies and needing to look
young," Marshall said. "But older bodies are an
accumulation of moments, and plastic surgery takes those moments
away." Plastic
surgery, she said, also reinforces the culture's negative view of
aging. "People
refuse to value who they've become when they get old," said the
32-year-old Marshall. "They try to be as young as possible and
plastic surgery only perpetuates it." One
woman who is comfortable with aging is Ruth Garrett, 67, a retired
gerontology professor. She said she's happy with her looks, and
believes older women should teach younger ones to care about their
minds and health. "When
I look at myself in the mirror, I see my mother. And that's
OK," said Garrett, from Hendersenville, Tenn. "If my
daughter looks at herself in 20 years and sees me, is that so
bad?"
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