The Anecdotal Cyber Investigations of Lifestyle Lift, American Laser Center

by jfrentzen 12/16/2008 6:23:00 AM

In case no one has told you lately, the Internet can be a powerful forum for disseminating information about the pros and cons of our industry. For example, the myriad of "doctor review" sites -- perhaps best exemplified by MakeMeHeal.com and RealSelf.com -- are di regeur these days. They fill a need, for sure. However, I don't pay as close attention to these sites as the ones that review actual surgical procedures or specific businesses/practices that have caused customers some grief.

Two controversial subjects that I have been following -- the procedure known as the "lifestyle lift" and the American Laser Clinics medspa franchise -- are well-represented in opinionated blogs and consumer complaint discussion forums. And, in the case of American Laser Centers, the physician community has tracked the firm's allegedly questionable practices on the MedicalSpa MD forum.

In an ongoing series titled American Laser Clinics Part 1: Armed guards & threats, MedicalSpaMD has collected a series of posts detailing how it came to be that one of the clinics hired an armed guard to prevent a physician from seeing his own patients. As the discussion thread continues, the wealth of information about this firm's sales and medical practices will probably make your jaw drop. Also check out American Laser Centers Complaints and this site.

As for the lifestyle lift, there's one well-done news report on the pros and cons of this procedure, which for the most part have been submitted by patients who had unfavorable outcomes, although you can find positives among the "hate mail." Check out True Stories Of The Lifestyle Lift and the lifestyle lift section of Infomercial Scams. The latter site provides an extensive "defenses" section in addition to the patient complaints area.

 

Two-fers and Fire Sales in Cosmetic Surgery

by jfrentzen 11/7/2008 8:34:00 AM

The New York Times this week ran an article about how some aesthetic practitioners have started offering "deep-cut coupon discounts" and "two-fers" on cosmetic procedures, not limited to fillers and injectables. In Hard Times, a Cosmetic Hard Sell:

In light of drastic consumer cutbacks on spending, some dermatologists, facial surgeons and plastic surgeons are promoting the kinds of markdowns, coupons or two-fers you might expect to find in supermarket circulars — complete with restrictions like “offer not good with any other promotion.”

And it’s not just injection specials. The Web sites of some surgeons list promotions like $500 off a single operation or $1,000 off a combination of body or facial surgeries.

Read it all here.

 

Reputations For Sale Are Reputations At Risk

by jfrentzen 10/2/2008 1:04:00 PM

Sandy Szwarc, BSN, RN, CCP, at Junkfood Science has published a thought-provoking article on a trend that aesthetic practitioners should not ignore -- cleaning up your conflicts of interest.

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