Rhee Ben S, Pham John, Tanzer Joshua R, Charvis Jodi S, Roussel Lauren O
From The Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University; Providence, R.I.
Lifespan Biostatistics, Epidemiology, Research Design, and Informatics Core, Rhode Island Hospital; Providence, R.I.
Plast Reconstr Surg Glob Open. 2024 Jul 5;12(7):e5963. doi: 10.1097/GOX.0000000000005963. eCollection 2024 Jul.
Cosmetic plastic surgery in the United States is underutilized by African American and Hispanic populations compared with their White and Asian counterparts. This study evaluated whether microeconomic spending traits as a representation of financial stability can inform trends in cosmetic procedure volumes by racial group.
Annual volumes for the top five cosmetic surgical and cosmetic minimally invasive procedures by racial/ethnic group from 2012 to 2020 were collected from the American Society of Plastic Surgeons' annual reports. Factor analysis was used to calculate inflexible and flexible consumer spending by racial/ethnic groupings from the US Bureau of Labor Statistics' consumer expenditure data. All four factors were calculated across US Bureau of Labor Statistics-defined racial/ethnic groupings and standardized so they could be interpreted relative to each other.
Compared with the other groupings, the White/Asian/other grouping spent significantly more on average for inflexible consumer spending ( = 0.0097), flexible consumer spending ( < 0.0001), cosmetic surgical procedures ( < 0.0001), and cosmetic minimally invasive procedures ( = 0.0006). In contrast, African American people spent significantly less on average for all four factors (all < 0.01). For Hispanic people, values were significantly less on average for flexible consumer spending ( = 0.0023), cosmetic surgical procedures ( < 0.0001), and cosmetic minimally invasive procedures ( = 0.0002).
This study demonstrates that inflexible and flexible consumer spending follow trends in utilization of cosmetic surgical and minimally invasive procedures by racial/ethnic groups. These microeconomic spending inequities may help further contextualize the racial/ethnic variation in access to cosmetic surgery.
与白人和亚裔人群相比,美国非裔和西班牙裔人群对整形美容手术的利用率较低。本研究评估了作为财务稳定性代表的微观经济支出特征是否能反映不同种族群体的美容手术量趋势。
从美国整形外科医师协会的年度报告中收集了2012年至2020年按种族/族裔分组的前五大美容外科手术和美容微创程序的年度手术量。使用因子分析根据美国劳工统计局的消费者支出数据计算不同种族/族裔分组的固定和灵活消费者支出。所有四个因子均根据美国劳工统计局定义的种族/族裔分组进行计算并标准化,以便相互比较。
与其他分组相比,白人/亚裔/其他分组在固定消费者支出( = 0.0097)、灵活消费者支出( < 0.0001)、美容外科手术( < 0.0001)和美容微创程序( = 0.0006)上的平均支出显著更高。相比之下,非裔美国人在所有四个因子上的平均支出显著更低(均 < 0.01)。对于西班牙裔人群,在灵活消费者支出( = 0.0023)、美容外科手术( < 0.0001)和美容微创程序( = 0.0002)上的平均数值显著更低。
本研究表明,固定和灵活消费者支出遵循不同种族/族裔群体在美容外科手术和微创程序利用方面的趋势。这些微观经济支出不平等可能有助于进一步解释美容手术获取方面的种族/族裔差异。