SEOUL -
It was in the mid-2000s when South
Korean plastic surgeon Joo Kwon noticed a trickle of Chinese women walking into
his clinic, even though he hadn't advertised overseas.
"They
somehow found a way to the clinic... and nearly all of them said they want the
face of Lee Young-Ae," Joo said, referring to a top South Korean actress
who starred in the pan-Asian hit drama "Jewel in the Palace".
The
trickle has now turned into a flood of Chinese packing Joo's JK Plastic Surgery
Centre - one of the country's largest - and many other clinics, lured by the
looks of South Korean entertainers who have taken Asia by storm.
A
Hallyu (Korean wave) of pop culture over the past decade has won a devoted fan
base in China, Southeast Asia and Japan. The South's TV dramas dominate
prime-time airwaves and K-pop bands sell out concerts and top the charts.
Legendary
TV hits like "Winter Sonata" and "Autumn Fairy Tale" help
draw tens of thousands of foreign fans to filming locations in South Korea
every year, boosting the tourism industry.
Now
skilled plastic surgeons in the looks-obsessed South - who often helped
beautify Korean stars in the first place - are enjoying an unexpected boom as
they do the same for their foreign fans.
According
to government data, overall medical spending by foreign visitors hit a record
$116 million last year. Fourteen per cent sought plastic surgery or skin
treatments such as botox.
Almost
a half of all foreigners seeking a nose job, a facelift, a jawbone reduction or
a tummy tuck were from China. Their number nearly tripled from 1,657 in 2009 to
4,400 in 2010.
"The
Hallyu boom has definitely played a key role in drawing new patients from abroad,"
said Hong Jeong-Geun, spokesman for the Korea Society of Plastic and
Reconstructive Surgeons.
Hong
said many star-struck foreigners visit clinics with photos of celebrities like
Kim Hee-Sun, a popular actress in Asia, and ask surgeons to emulate her nose
angle or eyes.
Made beautiful with a little 'help'
"They
understand that some stars, rather than born beautiful, were made beautiful
with a little bit of help from plastic surgeons," Hong told AFP.
Cut-throat
competition among the country's growing number of plastic surgeons - who now
number some 1,700 - made them even more aggressive in trying to lure new
clients, he said.
Joo's
clinic in Seoul's affluent Gangnam district - home to more than 400 plastic
surgery and skin-treatment clinics - is at the forefront of such efforts.
About a
half of its customers are non-Koreans, from China, Japan, the Middle East and
even Africa. Patients picked up at the airport by limousines are greeted by
staffers who speak English, Chinese, Japanese, Vietnamese or Mongolian.
Joo
declined to give the total number of patients at his clinic but said 10 doctors
perform dozens of surgeries every day.
The
clinic recently opened its own hotel to better serve deep-pocketed foreigners
who spend an average of about 20 million won ($17,675) to get multiple surgery
during a single visit.
"I
think there's a good chance that plastic surgery can become South Korea's new
major export industry," said Joo.
Customers
like Anny Guo are highly sought after.
The
daughter of a construction firm CEO in the northeastern Chinese city of Jilin,
she flew to Seoul to get a nose job and make her high cheekbones less prominent.
Her
parents gave her 100,000 yuan ($15,860) after she begged them for months.
Undesirable
trend
"I
want to have a face and skin like Song Hye-Gyo...or nose like Han Ga-In,"
the 24-year-old college student told AFP, referring to popular South Korean
actresses.
Many
South Korean TV shows are aired with subtitles on Chinese websites only a day
after being screened in Seoul.
"Most
of my friends who watch South Korean dramas want to come here to get surgery.
They think plastic surgeons here are the best in Asia," said Guo.
Policymakers
have eased regulations, allocated a greater budget, staged presentations
overseas and given awards to successful clinics to promote all kinds of medical
tourism.
"Medical
tourism, plastic surgery included, will be a new growth driver for our
economy....and the popularity of our stars is helping us a lot," said Jung
Eun-Young, deputy director of the health ministry's policy department.
Even
cosmetic surgeons, however, have some reservations.
Joo
Kwon said it was undesirable that more and more Koreans are seeking such
operations.
"I
think South Korea has a very rigorous and narrow definition of beauty because
we're an ethnically homogenous society and everyone looks pretty much the same.
It is also related to low self-esteem," he said
"I
think the situation will somewhat moderate in future as society becomes more
diverse. But it will take quite a bit of time until we get there."
AFP
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