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Oz women with 'designer vaginas' getting psychiatric help | It was recently revealed that demands for 'designer vaginas' - cosmetic surgery to enhance the look of women's genitals - have tripled in Australia. Now the latest news is that women as young as 18 are being referred for psychiatric help as cosmetic surgery to enhance the look of their genitals fails to make them feel better about their bodies. The head of psychiatry at St Vincent 's Hospital said three women had been referred to its body dysmorphia clinic this year after undergoing labioplasty surgery, reports The Age. One feels permanently ''disfigured'', has not had sex for three years and has become so anxious about the way her genitals look she is on medication. Professor David Castle wants mandatory psychological screening for all women seeking vaginal ''rejuvenation'' procedures, to detect those with underlying mental health issues such as body dysmorphic disorder, a condition
that gives sufferers a distorted view of normal body parts. ''The girl who I saw
recently hasn't had a physical relationship since she had the surgery and is very
distressed about it. She has pain, she's tense and anxious and she spends half
her life checking herself in the mirror, constantly agonising about the whole
thing and wishing she hadn't had the procedure'' Professor Castle said. "At the
same time she's thinking maybe I should have another surgery because they're [labia]
still too long," he said. The woman was referred to the clinic by a gynaecologist
who was concerned for her welfare when she wanted a second labioplasty operation.
However, Professor Castle said some medical specialists were not so scrupulous
and would operate repeatedly on patients who should not go under the knife. ''I've
seen girls having these operations at 18. Then they go back because they want
another procedure and finally the gynaecologist or surgeon says maybe this isn't
quite right,'' he said. He said the young women he treated often felt pressured
into surgery because they feared men would not find them attractive if their labia
did not conform to a standard seen in pornography, in which the labia are often
airbrushed out. Professor Castle has called for legislation requiring makers of
pornography to label all images that have been airbrushed, in a bid to give young
women more realistic expectations of their bodies.
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