By Daniel Martin for the Daily Mail. Tens of millions of pounds are being spent every year by the NHS on cosmetic surgery, figures reveal. Taxpayers are forking out vast and growing sums for facelifts, nose jobs, liposuction and breast augmentation — at a time when patients are being denied life-saving cancer drugs. The number of facelifts and operations to increase breast size have more than doubled over the past decade, while there has been a 40 per cent rise in liposuction. Every week there are now nose jobs, 37 liposuction procedures, 22 facelifts and boob jobs being carried out on the cash-strapped Health Service.
NHS blows millions on boob jobs and facelifts | Daily Mail Online
But I feel like this is one of those subjects that needs to have a little conversation. Especially since there are so many young people getting plastic surgery now-a-days. I have an ass. I have hips. I started with a B cup. Not too bad right? It was weird.
The rate varied in particular studies, depending on things like how long women were monitored, the typical time being five years. Another 13 percent had to have lesser corrective surgeries. Even for healthy patients, both were forced to admit that "most women experienced at least one complication over the three year period". Many of the complications are about three times as likely for mastectomy reconstruction patients as for cosmetic augmentation patients. We regard this as socially the most acceptable and necessary time for implants to be used, but medically it is the most risky and unjustifiable time to use them.
She wants them to go from 3kg to 5kg each — which is roughly the weight of two bricks per boob — in the hopes to look like an extreme real-life version of a Barbie doll. My big boobs are the best decision of my life. I usually buy my bras in the UK.