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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Infodemiology

Date Submitted: Jul 23, 2024
Date Accepted: Apr 13, 2025

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

Global Surveillance of Public Interest in Cosmetic Tourism for Aesthetic Eyelid Surgery Abroad: Cross-Sectional Infodemiology Investigation of Internet Search Trends and Social Media Content

Azzam DB, Dai YL, North VS, Callahan AB, Heher KL, Kapadia MK, Vagefi MR

Global Surveillance of Public Interest in Cosmetic Tourism for Aesthetic Eyelid Surgery Abroad: Cross-Sectional Infodemiology Investigation of Internet Search Trends and Social Media Content

JMIR Infodemiology 2025;5:e64639

DOI: 10.2196/64639

PMID: 40456124

PMCID: 12148249

Global Surveillance of Public Interest in Cosmetic Tourism for Aesthetic Eyelid Surgery Abroad: Infodemiology Investigation of Internet Search Trends and Social Media Content

  • Daniel B. Azzam; 
  • Yi Ling Dai; 
  • Victoria S. North; 
  • Alison B. Callahan; 
  • Katrinka L. Heher; 
  • Mitesh K. Kapadia; 
  • M. Reza Vagefi

ABSTRACT

Background:

Global medical tourism for aesthetic surgery has become a popular phenomenon through ease of access in the digital era, though such services are not without potential risks. The application of infodemiology for global health surveillance may provide unique insights into unknown patient travel patterns and surgeon workforce dynamics abroad.

Objective:

This study aims to evaluate American cosmetic tourism trends in oculofacial plastic surgery, including demand profile and qualifications of the most sought-after international eyelid surgeons on social media.

Methods:

This cross-sectional infodemiology study queried Google Trends to assess United States (US) interest in aesthetic eyelid surgery abroad in twenty-five destination countries from 2013-2023. The highest rated content posted by 55 eyelid surgeons (US, n=11; international, n=44) on a social media platform (Instagram, LLC) was evaluated. Main outcomes included google search volumes for aesthetic eyelid surgery for each destination country, as well as specialty training and professional medical society affiliations of popular eyelid surgeons on social media in each of these countries.

Results:

The top five destinations Americans sought for aesthetic eyelid surgery abroad were South Korea, Mexico, Canada, Turkey, and China. Interest in eyelid surgery abroad remained stable over the last decade despite 118% growth in blepharoplasty searches. Social media indicated eyelid surgeons abroad were more often general plastic surgeons than in the US (68% vs 18%, P = .003). US surgeons more frequently completed oculofacial plastics, facial plastics, or aesthetic plastics fellowships compared to international surgeons (82% vs 18%, P < .001) and had membership in professional medical societies (100% vs 50%, P = .002).

Conclusions:

American demand for international eyelid surgery remained stable over the past decade despite a two-fold increase in US interest for blepharoplasty. Digital epidemiology data reveal a shortage of international surgeons with specialized aesthetic eyelid fellowship training or professional society affiliations on social media among the preferred destinations for Americans seeking aesthetic eyelid surgery. These findings may provide beneficial insights for patients interested in traveling abroad for eyelid surgery, as well as for surgeons or academic societies seeking to increase online presence or patient-directed educational content via social media engagement.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Azzam DB, Dai YL, North VS, Callahan AB, Heher KL, Kapadia MK, Vagefi MR

Global Surveillance of Public Interest in Cosmetic Tourism for Aesthetic Eyelid Surgery Abroad: Cross-Sectional Infodemiology Investigation of Internet Search Trends and Social Media Content

JMIR Infodemiology 2025;5:e64639

DOI: 10.2196/64639

PMID: 40456124

PMCID: 12148249

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