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South Korea's official secret plastic surgery hospital is dedicated to treating Chinese beauties in

South Korean officials secretly check whether plastic surgery hospitals pit Chinese, so for those girls who want to make themselves beautiful through plastic surgery, they should be cautious! Why does South Korean plastic surgery hospital pit Chinese?

A 34-year-old Chinese recently went to a well-known plastic surgery company in xinsadong, Jiangnan District, Seoul, South Korea for consultation. The doctor suggested that a should have an operation to shrink his nose and charge 12 million won (about 70000 yuan). South Koreans need up to 8 million won to perform such operations. A it's obvious that someone has been killed.

However, a is not an ordinary consumer. She (he) is one of the "undercover agents" in Jiangnan District to investigate the "Assassin" problem of plastic surgery. South Korea hired three Chinese people to disguise themselves as patients from July 1 to August 10 to investigate the medical service status of 50 orthopedic surgeons in Jiangnan District, South Korea's Asia economy reported Wednesday.

Jiangnan District said that the number of patients in China has decreased dramatically recently. In order to attract Chinese people to visit Korea for medical tourism, the survey was conducted to understand and improve the medical services in Jiangnan district. It is reported that 42.1% of the total foreign patients are Chinese patients who visit South of the Yangtze River in Seoul.

From appointment to consultation, Jiangnan District evaluated each link separately, according to the report. Specifically, it can be divided into reasonable operation cost, introduction of patients' rights and obligations, and whether doctors make professional negotiations. The results showed that five of the 50 orthopedic surgeons were consulted by ordinary people, known as "chief roomers", rather than by professional doctors. Other orthopedic surgeons force patients to pay after consultation. An 'undercover patient' was asked to 'pay' and make an appointment for surgery when he got up to leave at the end of a hospital consultation. The 'undercover patient' said he had only 50000 won with him, and the hospital said he would pay 50000 won as the deposit for the operation first.

After the surge from 2009 to 2014, the number of Chinese going to Korea for plastic surgery or various treatments has decreased by about 20% since 2015. At the same time, Chinese medical satisfaction with South Korea also dropped from 89.6 points in 2014 to 86.6 points in 2015. It was previously revealed that a plastic surgery hospital in Jiangnan charged 100 million won to foreigners who performed double eyelid surgery, causing a lot of shock. The South Korean government has also introduced some policies to try to crack down on the phenomenon of "guest killing". For example, the cost of plastic surgery for foreigners in Korean medical institutions was disclosed in a multilingual way on the Internet, and the Chinese version of the "plastic price list" was first published. But as of last year, South Korean media still lamented: 'the field of plastic surgery in South Korea is turning red. '