Dr Michael Rich – Australian Dermatology and Cosmetic Surgery Clinic
Monday, 9th Febuary 2009
A recent article from The Wall Street Journal discussed how many people were still having their cosmetic treatments due to either their ‘reliance’, or ‘fear’ of losing their jobs if they are not seen as youthful.
To some degree many of our patients may fall into these catagories, however there are also many people who understand that these treatments don’t define who they are, they just make them feel better about themselves, just the same as going to the gym or seeing your football team win a game.
Vanity appears to be trumping frugality in a looks-conscious society.
Despite the dismal economic climate, most women — and men — who undergo appearance-enhancing treatments such as Botox injections are spending hundreds or even thousands of dollars a year to maintain the regimen, aesthetic physicians say. Meanwhile, some older patients who are putting off or forgoing expensive facelifts are instead opting for less-costly injections and laser treatments.
Doctors say a weak economy hasn’t curtailed demand for Botox injections.
Maralyn Burr of Omaha, Neb., in June lost her job as a district sales manager for bookstore chain Borders Group Inc. Ms. Burr, who is $140,000 in debt from her 22-year-old daughter’s musical education, says she has slashed spending and all but stopped eating out. But she hasn’t given up her Restylane and Botox injections. “It’s like comfort food,” she says.
Nearly three out of four plastic surgeons who responded to a survey this fall reported that demand has increased or held steady for minimally invasive procedures, including Allergan Inc.’s Botox antiwrinkle drug, dermal fillers used to plump up lips and smile lines, and skin-smoothing chemical peels, according to the American Society of Plastic Surgeons, a professional group representing 6,700 surgeons. The survey also found a steep fall in demand for plastic surgeries ranging from breast augmentation to nose reshaping.
To be sure, makers of aesthetic medical treatments are bracing for a challenging year ahead. While many established patients are sticking to their beauty regimens, it’s tough to entice new patients in the current economic environment. In late October, Allergan said that dermal-filler sales were up 18% through September, but the company reduced its 2008 Botox sales guidance, citing overall “subdued demand.” Medicis Pharmaceutical Corp. recently has been offering a $100 consumer rebate on its Restylane family of products.
Most of the products used for so-called facial rejuvenation weren’t available in the U.S. when the last downturn hit, so there’s no historical precedent to estimate their sales performance in the current economic environment. While Botox has been on the market for nearly 20 years, it didn’t receive regulatory approval for cosmetic use until 2002, at the tail end of the dotcom-led stock-market bust. Allergan’s dermal filler, Juvéderm, which competes with Restylane, has been on the market for about two years.
Joel Schlessinger, Ms. Burr’s dermatologist in Omaha, says the number of his patients seeking dermal fillers began to increase on a year-over-year basis in the last few months, after posting declines earlier in the year. “Things are so bad [in financial markets] that investments aren’t even worthwhile anymore, so people are investing in themselves,” he suggests.
Malcolm Z. Roth, a plastic surgeon in New York City, says that even people with good jobs and robust savings are worried about the future and are afraid to miss work for surgery. They come in, he says, knowing that they need a facelift but asking if there’s “something I can do to tide them over.” Botox and fillers, he responds. “I think that’s probably something we’ll be seeing more of next year,” he adds.
Pay as You Go
Patients also like the idea that with aesthetic treatments, they can pay as they go, Dr. Roth says. The treatments cost his patients between $500 and $2,000 for a visit, rather than perhaps $15,000 for a facelift. “Botox lasts about four months, but if you can’t afford to come back, you don’t have to,” he says. By contrast, patients are reluctant to run up credit-card debt on a big ticket item like surgery.
Increasingly, many aesthetic patients view their treatments as professional self-preservation rather than as a personal indulgence. Appearances make a difference, says Kathleen Hudson, a 57-year-old marketing consultant in Falls Church, Va. “If you’re in the business world and you want to be competitive with the younger people, you need to stay on top of your game,” she says.
Ms. Hudson says it costs her between $300 and $400 every six months to have a syringe of Restylane or Juvéderm injected in a few places around her mouth and smile lines. She says she considers the injections “maintenance” and compares them to the $300 cost of hair styling with color highlights. Her plastic surgeon, Roberta Gartside in Reston, Va., says she is remodeling her office and adding staff to accommodate more patients like Ms. Hudson who are seeking minimally invasive treatments rather than surgery.
Media and political consultant Julie Buckner says that looking good gives her confidence to focus on her message when she appears on television. Now that the election season has passed, business is slowing and she expects money to be tight next year. The 41-year-old single mom, who lives in Los Angeles, is cutting spending and delaying a home remodeling project, but she isn’t skipping her beauty injections. It’s “part of my cost of doing business,” she says. She says she is trying to stretch out the interval between visits to her injecting physician, Robert Kotler, who charges about $1,000 for her regimen of Botox, Restylane and Juvéderm shots.
The Wall Street Journal – 2009