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South Korea's cosmetic surgery is a market leader, with South Korea taking a 25% share in the global market. [16] One in five Korean women have undergone plastic surgery, compared to just one in twenty in the United States. [17] In 2018, a total of 464,452 patients visited South Korea for cosmetic surgery, a 16.7 percent increase from 2017. [18]
Bergen County, host to the county's highly ranked Academies magnet public high school [8] [9] [10] as well as to the North American headquarters operations of South Korean chaebols including Samsung, [11] LG Corp, [12] and Hanjin Shipping, [13] was home to all of the nation's top 10 municipalities by percentage of Korean population. [14]
The National Asian Pacific Center on Aging (NAPCA) was founded in 1979 [3] and is a Seattle, Washington-based non-profit [4] and American advocacy and service organization for elderly Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders (AAPI). NAPCA works to assist AAPI seniors and educate the general public on the needs of the AAPI aging community.
Korea's birth control policy began in the 1960s and ended in the mid-1990s when birth rates fell significantly below the level of population replacement. As a result, Korea's fertility rate declined by about half from the end of the 1970s (2.90 births/woman) to 1.56 births/woman at the end of the 1980s. [9]
In South Korea, there are about 3,200 general hospitals nationwide. This list illustrates the 45 senior general hospitals (Korean: 상급종합병원), which are general hospitals capable of providing high-level medical services, accredited by the ministry of health and welfare of the Republic of Korea.
Tina S. Alster, MD, FAAD, is an American dermatologist, educator, researcher, and author.Alster specializes in dermatologic laser surgery and cosmetic dermatology. She is the founding director of her skin care clinic, the Washington Institute of Dermatologic Laser Surgery, [1] and is a Clinical Professor of Dermatology at Georgetown University Medical Center in Washington, D.C. [2]
A study from 2008 determined that 20 percent of young Korean girls have undergone cosmetic surgery. This is significantly above the average rate in other countries. [3] A recent survey from Gallup Korea in 2015 determined that approximately one-third of South Korean women between 19 and 29 have claimed to have had plastic surgery.
East Asian blepharoplasty, more commonly known as double eyelid surgery, is a cosmetic procedure that reshapes the skin around the eye to create a crease in an upper eyelid that naturally lacks one. Although 70-83% of East Asian women naturally have upper eyelid creases, it is estimated that 17-30% of Chinese and Japanese women lack this ...