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Brazil's Poor Get Free Beauty Treatment

JENNY BARCHFIELD   03/22/12 03:01 PM ET  AP

RIO DE JANEIRO — A machine purrs as it delivers electrical pulses deep into the saggy skin on Barbara Penha's jawline, a high-tech treatment used first to tighten her jowls and then to sculpt her tummy.

The technique is all the rage at the chic dermatology clinics that cater to legions of wealthy women here who invest serious time and big bucks into looking their bikini best.

But Penha isn't a socialite, nor did she fork out the $450 that a single radio-frequency session typically runs in Rio de Janeiro. The struggling housewife got the treatment free of charge at a clinic that provides the poor access to the kinds of pricey cosmetic treatments that have become almost de rigueur among Brazil's moneyed elite.

Free Botox and laser hair removal, free chemical peels and anti-cellulite treatments may at first seem shockingly frivolous in a country like Brazil – which, despite phenomenal economic growth in recent years that has lifted millions out of extreme poverty, still battles with diseases like tuberculosis and dengue.

But the philosophy behind the more than 220 clinics across Brazil that treat people like Penha and thousands of maids, receptionists, waitresses and others is simple: Beauty is a right, and the poor deserve to be ravishing, too.

The Brazilian Society of Aesthetic Medicine's Rio clinic has performed free procedures on more than 14,000 patients since its founding in 1997, said Dr. Nelson Rosas, who heads the Rio branch.

Good looks, doctors argue, are more than skin deep, and by treating what patients view as physical flaws doctors are often also healing their psyches.

"What's a wrinkle? Something minor, right? Something with precious little importance," Rosas said. "But when we treat the wrinkle, that unimportant little thing, we're actually treating something very important: The patient's self esteem."

The notion that beauty treatments can act in much the same way as psychoanalysis, helping free patients from crippling neuroses, was pioneered over the past decades by celebrated Brazilian plastic surgeon Ivo Pitanguy.

Nicknamed the "philosopher of plastic surgery" for his intellectual and psychoanalytical take on the vocation, 85-year-old Pitanguy is largely responsible for Brazil's reputation as a world leader in the field and a top destination for cosmetic surgery tourism.

His skill with the scalpel catapulted him to international fame – the surgeon is arguably Brazil's second most famous person after soccer legend Pele. It's made him the go-to man for A-list celebrities, international statesmen and royalty seeking a quick fix to their aesthetic woes. Pitanguy's long and illustrious patient roster is said to include such luminaries as Zsa Zsa Gabor, Francois Mitterrand and Brigitte Bardot, although the discreet doctor has rarely named names.

Pitanguy's handicraft on the world's rich and famous allowed him to join their ranks – he commutes to Rio by helicopter from his own private island. But he has remained attentive to the less privileged.

More than half a century ago, he founded a surgical wing to help treat the poor. While the wing at the Santa Casa de Misericordia hospital in Rio focuses on reconstructive operations for burn victims and people with serious deformations, it also provides discounted cosmetic procedures.

Other hospitals have since followed suit. Now, at least two dozen mostly public hospitals in Rio alone offer discounted or sometimes free cosmetic surgeries to low income people, according to a website aimed at informing potential patients.

With more than 11.5 million operations a year, Brazil is the world's second biggest consumer of plastic surgery after the United States, but here there's none of the kind of stigma that still clings to the practice in the U.S.

Local celebrities appear on the cover of glossy magazines with titles like "Plastica e Beleza," or "Plastic (Surgery) and Beauty," and wax poetic about their latest face-lift, breast implant, or round of Botox. Actors on the prime time soap operas that captivate the public here regularly get surgical makeovers, as do the characters they play as part of the soaps' high-drama story lines.

Silicone, on prominent display at the beach here year round, takes center stage during Carnival, when samba queens wearing only a sprinkling of sequins and feathers flaunt their pumped-up bustlines and gravity-defying rear ends at Rio's extravagant Sambadrome parade. (Breast and buttock implants are among the most popular plastic surgeries here, along with liposuction, facelifts and procedures to flatten prominent ears).

The senate is currently debating whether the government's national health service should fully cover breast reconstruction for cancer patients. The state-funded health service already pays for gastroplasties for the morbidly obese and some surgeries to repair serious deformities or injuries, including correcting cleft palates in children.

"In Brazil, plastic surgery is now seen as something of the norm," said Alexander Edmonds, an anthropology professor at the University of Amsterdam and author of "Pretty Modern: Beauty, Sex and Plastic Surgery in Brazil." `'In a way, surgery is becoming the standard of care among middle class and wealthy women, and so it's not surprising that lower class people aspire to it, too."

While he acknowledges the potent psychological benefits that sometimes result from plastic surgery, Edmonds warns that Brazil's overwhelmingly pro-"plastica" attitude can be dangerous.

"The word `beauty' in Brazil kind of obscures the fact that you're talking about real surgery," he said. "The problems and risks of surgery are often minimized, and these operations tend to be seen like a `beautification' like any other, which of course they're not"

Still, worries about risk don't appear to be holding many here back. On the few days a year when low-income people can apply for free or cut-rate cosmetic surgeries, the lines snake out and around the hospitals. Once their case has been approved, patients often spend months or even years on the waitlist ahead of the actual surgery.

The free surgeries are widely seen to benefit the hospitals, too, as they allow young doctors to hone their skills.

Nilcea Furtado said she waited three years for her first free laser treatment there. Though the clinic, which is also a private training institute for doctors, doesn't perform surgical procedures that require anything more than local anesthetic, Furtado says she's experienced the kinds of psychological benefits described by superstar surgeon Pitanguy.

"Since I was a teenager, I had lots of horrible hairs on my chin and I tried everything to get rid of them but nothing worked," said Furtado, a 48-year-old secretary whose entire monthly salary is less than a single laser hair removal treatment session. "I had heard that lasers were effective but they're so expensive, they seemed like an impossible dream for me."

Six free laser hair removal sessions later, Furtado's chin is silky smooth and she says she's a new woman.

"I never knew what it was to look into the mirror and like what I saw," she said. "It's an amazing feeling."

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Cinquopated
Your micro-bio is either half-empty or half-full
10:19 AM on 03/25/2012
They'd do better providing better public education and free healthcare. I heard be healthy and having a job does wonders for your self-esteem, too.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Niasia
Tryin to make it in the Nation's Capital
05:39 PM on 03/24/2012
Oh good lord!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rda1911a1
God Bless John Browning
07:49 PM on 03/23/2012
Of course they should in Brazil. I mean they don't get foodstamps, free cell phones or section eight housing like here. Might as well give them surgery instead.
Cinquopated
Your micro-bio is either half-empty or half-full
10:17 AM on 03/25/2012
That's an interesting take Maybe they should take the money out of plastic surgery and give it toward a higher minimum wage instead?
05:23 PM on 03/23/2012
Yes, I don't even need to read the article...Yes, one hundred times yes.
02:48 PM on 03/23/2012
unless you look like frankenstein no. I would rather they address teh cause of the poverty in that country and any for that matter so they can have the basics in abundance and afford to pay their own way outside of necessities of life and conducting business. use the money for that instead of this. what made them decide to do this anyway?

rose
01:17 PM on 03/23/2012
"The notion that beauty treatments can act in much the same way as psychoanalysis, helping free patients from crippling neuroses" - Of course: both raise one's self-esteem. Ours being, for many reasons, an era of universally low levels of self-confidence and self-image, it's most moving to read that poor people are given the opportunity. Let the rich look after themselves.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jill in NYC
The cat ate my micro-bio.
02:34 AM on 03/24/2012
Spending a day in a beauty spa can be at least as effective as psychotherapy for lowering depression and raising self-esteem, and it's a lot cheaper.
03:15 AM on 03/24/2012
I absolutely agree.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
simplyriki
12:25 PM on 03/23/2012
Stop hating America. Your government would not do this for your own people even wayyyy back in her First-World Country days when we taxpayers COULD afford to foot the bill! Heck, the rich people of America nowadays would be more than happy to scrape away every last bit of BASIC food, water, and shelter assistance to, well, basically anyone who's not them, in the name of "conservatism" and some days it seems like they might just finally pull it off.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rogelio Lopez
11:44 AM on 03/23/2012
Maybe we should do that here....theres a lot of ugly people here......just sayin'
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
shawnepink
08:45 AM on 03/23/2012
Free? You know what that means...they want to experiment on poor people!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rogelio Lopez
11:43 AM on 03/23/2012
my thoughts exactly!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
simplyriki
12:27 PM on 03/23/2012
You know, just like people vary individually maybe so so do countries. Maybe Brazil doesn't always have to have shady ulterior motives the way 'Murricah does.
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invirginia
A higher double-standard.
08:40 AM on 03/23/2012
I would take a poor, goodlooking Brazilian over a wealthy, ugly American any day.
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invirginia
A higher double-standard.
08:39 AM on 03/23/2012
So THIS is why Brazilians are so hot.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mater
mater
05:31 AM on 03/23/2012
Much rather see them get free DENTAL care, so they feel restored to confidence and self-esteem and good health.
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taylor3333
04:30 AM on 03/23/2012
Not sure whether to laugh or cry at the vulgarity of this subject matter. Most of Brazil is starving
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03:31 AM on 03/23/2012
No they should get other things for free that are more important....DUH!
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02:24 AM on 03/23/2012
Bravo! I think it's a great idea! I've been in the beauty industry for years, in both the medical and the cosmetic side, and something happens to a women who gets something special done....it can be as simple as a mini make-over or a botox injection, or something more complex like liposuction or a nose job...either way there is more confidence. Let's look at botox as an example. It takes about 7 days to see the full affect of the treatment, but women walk out of their doctors office smiling and confident, even though they look no different than they did thirty minutes before.
Why do you think make-up artists are welcomed and encouraged to visit the terminally ill for make-overs? We won't change their diagnosis, but for a day they can feel special and well, normal. I once visited a woman who was going through some intense chemo and radiation and had subsequently lost all her hair, including most of her lashes and her eyebrows. She started crying when I filled in her brows because she said it's the first time she's felt normal in months. All it took was eyebrows.
05:54 AM on 03/23/2012
I agree with you. If people feel confident (and let's face it.. it's not always something you can actively control) they're happier and more productive.