The Economics of Everyday Things - 63. Botox
Episode Date: September 16, 2024Why do millions of people pay to have one of the world’s deadliest toxins injected into their faces? Zachary Crockett looks surprised. SOURCES:Dana Berkowitz, sociologist and author.Jean Carruthers..., pioneer of cosmetic Botox, clinical professor of ophthalmology at the University of British Columbia, and owner of Carruthers Cosmetic.Steven Williams, president of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons and owner of Tri Valley Plastic Surgery. RESOURCES:"Botox Is More Affordable Than Ever. Is That A Good Thing?" by Krista Bennett DeMaio (Women's Health, 2024)."Early Development History of Botox (onabotulinumtoxinA)," by Alan B. Scott, Dennis Honeychurch, and Mitchell F. Brin (Medicine, 2023)."How Barely-There Botox Became the Norm," by Jessica Schiffer (The New York Times, 2021).Botox Nation: Changing the Face of America, by Dana Berkowitz (2017)."Billions and Billions for Botox," by Vauhini Vara (The New Yorker, 2014)."Botox is Destroying Hollywood Acting," by Johann Hari (HuffPost, 2011)."The Botox Boom," by David Noonan (Newsweek, 2002).
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As a plastic surgeon in Northern California, Dr. Stephen Williams performs a lot of operations.
We tackle the full spectrum from head to toe, facelifts, blepharoplasties, liposuction,
tummy tucks, and breast augmentations.
But one of his most in-demand treatments happens outside of the operating room.
Every month, around 150 patients each pay hundreds of dollars to get one of the most toxic substances on Earth injected into their faces.
Markets go up and down. The economy is good or bad. but Botox is one of those things that people will really, really try not to cut back on.
Twenty years ago, people were very quiet about it, like, I don't want anyone to know, but
now it's part of what people see as self-care.
Botox is often touted as a cosmetic miracle drug.
A few injections can temporarily reduce wrinkles and stave off signs of aging.
Last year, there were more than 9 million procedures involving Botox or competing injectable
brands in the US alone.
You can get Botox treatments from a credentialed doctor like Stephen Williams, who happens
to be the president of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons, but you can also get
them at medical spas and even dentist's offices.
People are seeking them out
much earlier in life than they used to.
I think we're seeing a generational shift in the patients.
Boomers treat things once they've happened.
Millennials are into prevention,
and they've taken a look at their boomer parents and thought, I don't want to go there quite as fast.
And so they've done, it's actually got a slang word,
baby Botox.
For the Freakonomics Radio Network,
this is the economics of everyday things.
I'm Zachary Crockett. Today, Botox.
Before Botox was a lucrative business, it was a deadly toxin found in sausages.
Like all crazy things, the story starts back in the 1700s.
Again, that's Dr. Stephen Williams.
In Germany, there's this phenomenon called sausage poisoning.
People would consume uncured meats, and every once in a while, people would die.
As time went on, people began to study it a little bit, and the first thing they did
is they classified the symptoms, and they noticed that people kind of had flat faces
in effect and sometimes would have a little bit less
ability to move.
Researchers eventually isolated the toxin in these meats and gave it a name, botulinum,
derived from the Latin word for sausage.
It was deemed to be around 100 billion times more toxic than cyanide, so deadly in fact
that it was considered for use as a bio-weapon.
In a pure form, botulinum toxin is incredibly, incredibly deadly. And so, of course, the
military said, this is great, we have this thing that's really potentially deadly. And,
you know, there was all this really nefarious stuff that was planned to do with it. There
were even plans to maybe assassinate Castro by putting it in his cigar.
There were even plans to maybe assassinate Castro by putting it in his cigar.
None of those plans ever panned out.
But in the decades following World War II, researchers started to wonder if botulinum toxin might have medical uses.
And in the late 1970s, an eye surgeon named Alan Scott thought it might be useful
to treat a disorder called strabismus, which causes the patient's eyeballs to misalign.
That was the first entry into it being used clinically to make people better.
Scott found that injecting extremely small, purified, non-lethal amounts of a certain type of botulinum toxin around the eye
could temporarily paralyze and weaken the orbital muscles and fix the
problem.
He named this drug oculinum.
It was a therapeutic breakthrough, one that Dr. Jean Carruthers witnessed firsthand, and
she found it emotional.
I remember one patient who came in led by his wife by the hand. He couldn't open his eyes.
And three days later, he sent me a picture
of himself driving, sorry, driving his red convertible.
Yeah, sorry.
Caruthers is a clinical professor of ophthalmology
at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver.
She worked closely with Dr. Scott in the early 1980s Professor of Ophthalmology at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver.
She worked closely with Dr. Scott in the early 1980s before starting her own practice with
her husband, a dermatologist.
She used botulinum to treat optical problems.
But one day, she discovered it had other benefits.
One of my patients got angry at me.
She said, you didn't treat me here, pointing at her medial brows.
And I apologized to her and said, I'm so sorry.
Didn't think you were spasming there.
And she said, I know.
I know I'm not spasming there.
But every time you treat me there, I get this beautiful,
untroubled expression."
And the penny dropped because my husband told me how difficult it was to treat these frown
lines.
Caruthers began studying the cosmetic use of botulinum toxin.
The first test subject was the receptionist in her office.
She had really impressive frown lines.
By 3 o'clock, they were pretty severe.
We treated her, and you could see this amazing difference.
In 1991, Dr. Scott sold oculinum to the pharmaceutical company
Allergan.
The following year, the treatment was renamed Botox.
It took Allergan another decade to secure FDA approval for cosmetic
use. And even then, sales weren't so hot. It was hard enough to sell the public on the merits of a
watered-down neurotoxin that once killed sausage enthusiasts. But Botox had another problem, too.
Early on, there was a stigma that Botox froze your face.
to. Early on, there was a stigma that Botox froze your face. That's Dana Berkowitz. She's a sociologist and the author of the book Botox Nation, Changing the Face of America. They really
wanted to get around that stigma and show that, well, if you just use a little bit of Botox,
you can still express yourself. It was couched in this post-feminist narrative of, you know, doing it for you.
Allergan embarked on an advertising campaign to convince millions of people,
mostly women, that Botox could be a form of aesthetic liberation.
Talk to your doctor about the one, the only Botox cosmetic freedom of expression.
That's what it's all about.
Freedom of expression. It's what it's all about. This kind of messaging worked. Between 2000 and 2015, Botox sales jumped tenfold.
In 2020, Allergan was bought out by another pharmaceutical firm, AbVie.
And today, global sales of therapeutic and cosmetic Botox clock in at $5.7 billion annually.
There are now multiple competing drugs on the market, like
Dysport, Xiumin, and Juveaux. But Botox is still the undisputed king of the industry,
accounting for around 70% of the market share in its category. That's largely thanks to
ongoing ads that target the everyday woman.
Hi, my name is Tanya. I'm 42 years young.
I am a mom of nine.
And this is like the first thing I've done for me in a really, really long time.
My life is still crazy.
It's just as full as it was before.
Just with less lines.
Getting regular injections to treat wrinkles has become much more culturally acceptable,
even for men.
And you don't have to look hard to find a place
to get treated. There's medical spas in every suburban small town now across the country
who promote botox injections. It's really everywhere. That's coming up.
There are two main ways that our faces age. One is through the natural loss of the protein
collagen. This causes our skin to sag over time. The other way is through repetitive
facial movement. By smiling and frowning in the same ways year after year, we etch wrinkles
into our skin. Botox works on the second kind of wrinkles. It binds
to nerve receptors that temporarily paralyze a targeted muscle. But it doesn't work on
the first kind.
When people have nasolabial folds, those are kind of the folds along your cheek or what
we call marionette lines, which are sometimes those wrinkles that are on the corners of
your mouth down to your chin.
Botox is terrible for those because they're not caused by a lot of muscle activation.
Again, that's Dr. Stephen Williams, who runs a plastic surgery practice in California.
For those wrinkles caused by collagen loss, surgeons usually recommend dermal fillers.
These are injections of synthetic or natural polymers
that plump up the skin.
But when we think about wrinkles on your forehead,
when you kind of raise your eyes in surprise
when someone says something really weird,
those wrinkles are caused by the muscles in your forehead
contracting and creating these lines in your skin,
or the wrinkles between your eyebrows when you are confused.
Temporarily paralyzing those muscles decreases the wrinkles.
Medical practitioners typically buy Botox wholesale from a medical distributor.
A single vial of cosmetic Botox might cost them between $350 and $700.
That one vial contains 100 units,
which might be enough for a dozen treatments or for one big one.
For a brow lift where you inject a little bit on the side of the eye,
those doses are relatively small, six to eight units.
For people who are trying to get reduction in their platysma, so those neck muscles that give people some of the banding on the neck,
dosages can be 50 to a hundred units at one setting.
The treatment cost itself is usually about double what the cost of Botox is to
us.
That's typically the markup at most reputable dermatology plastic surgery
offices.
There aren't any federal regulations
around who can administer Botox.
In some states, you can find treatments offered
not just by plastic surgeons and dermatologists,
but by estheticians and even dentists.
Across the country, thousands of medical spas
have popped up offering Botox treatments
for lower prices than most plastic surgeons
charge.
And they're lucrative enough that private equity firms have started buying them up and
consolidating the industry.
There has been a little bit of a race to the bottom.
A lot of these med spas, as they proliferate, it's a pricing thing and they'll say, well,
we'll do $4 a unit or $5 a unit.
As Botox has become more accessible, so too has counterfeit Botox that can be readily found on the internet. These fakes can be hard to tell apart from the real thing.
They might contain no botulinum toxin at all, or they might contain far more than the proper dosage.
Federal agencies have identified more than 2,000 instances of counterfeit
Botox being sold by medical professionals in the last decade.
These products are manufactured under different
regulatory scrutiny in other countries. And because there's less regulation
around it, a lot of times it's less expensive.
They're trying to make money and they don't necessarily care about people. The problem is that the treatment itself is a medical
procedure and has risks and then the medication, even when sourced appropriately, if you don't
know how to use it, has risks. While plastic surgeons charge a premium for trustworthy service,
a single visit for Botox is still a lot less lucrative than surgery. A frown line treatment
might cost $500 or so compared to $10,000 or more for a facelift. But for most people,
the effects of Botox wear off in three to four months. So you have to keep going back
to maintain your desired look. That means that offering Botox provides doctors like
Williams with a form
of recurring revenue.
If we're just doing surgeries, we might see our patients for some liposuction or breast
augmentation in their 20s. And then potentially after they've had children, maybe a tummy
tuck and then maybe as they get older, maybe blepharoplasty or facelift, Botox allows a continual relationship with patients over time.
We have patients using Botox for almost 20 years now.
People are getting started with Botox at younger ages than they used to.
Botox was originally marketed to women in their 50s and 60s. Today, many new patients are women in their 30s, 20s, or even late teens.
They're getting Botox before wrinkles even form.
Dana Berkowitz, the sociologist, says this has a lot to do with social media.
They interviewed women between the ages of 20 and 30 who had used Botox.
Every single one of them said that social media
was the culprit.
We have targeted ads.
You have young influencers who are getting free procedures
from clinics and medical spas
so that they document the procedure on their feed.
There was this idea that you used to get beautiful in private,
and now you got beautiful in public for the world to see.
Some of the women that Berkowitz interviewed
also expressed an economic justification for getting Botox.
I interviewed three broadcast journalists.
All of them spoke about the importance of using Botox to preserve their appearance.
Some people also talked about writing it into their contract that they would be able to
get Botox for their career preservation.
A lot of people said, you know, my face is my business card.
I need it to preserve my appearance.
Dana Berkowitz has gotten Botox injections herself. But she also
has some reservations about it. Because all of those Botox
faces we see on Instagram, TikTok and local news stations
have introduced new insecurities around the natural process of
aging.
Does Botox work? Yes. Does Botox make people look and feel better a lot of the time?
Yes.
Is this still problematic?
Absolutely.
Every single time I use Botox, I feel
like I am individually failing at feminist ethics.
It transforms our perception of what is normal,
of what is beautiful, of what is beautiful,
of what an aging face should and does look like.
Dr. Stephen Williams has mulled over
that conundrum many times.
Unfortunately, there's bias to pay,
there's bias to access to resources,
there's bias to finding a mate or a life partner.
I think that it's important to recognize that society
puts enormous pressure on people to look a certain way.
Some people choose to respond to that,
saying, I'm going to age gracefully and not fight it.
But the flip side is, that is what society is.
People really like the things that Botox is that is what society is. People really like the
things that Botox is able to do for them.
For the economics of everyday things, I'm Zachary Krocket. This episode was
produced by me and Sarah Lilly and mixed by Jeremy Johnston. We had help from
Daniel Moritz-Rapson. I want to tell you right now, I haven't frowned since 1987.
The Freakonomics Radio Network, the hidden side of everything.