David Sarwer, of Penn's Perelman School of Medicine, an authority on mental health issues in cosmetic surgery, offers a course at the annual convention of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons and has drawn up lists of three questions physicians should ask of patients requesting cosmetic surgery and three questions the patients should ask themselves.
For the physicianCan the plastic surgeon really see the defect?
Does the patient report impaired daily function based on his or her appearance? "If they say, 'I'm not dating because of my appearance or I'm not working because of my appearance,' " says Sarwer, "that could be a sign of BDD" (body dysmorphic disorder).




