Cosmetic Procedures Aren’t Just for Plastic Surgeons Anymore

The Jakarta Globe


Ulma Haryanto

With just two medical schools in the country specializing in cosmetic surgery and only 104 registered plastic surgeons, other doctors and specialists are getting in on what’s fast becoming a booming industry.

Among the more popular of what have been termed “aesthetic doctors” are dermatologists.

Dr. Djoko Widodo, head of the East Java chapter of the Indonesian Association of Dermatologists (Perbeki), says demand for beauty treatments are driving skin specialists like himself to also perform cosmetic operations.

“Dermatologists with an interest in aesthetics and who understand the procedures may perform facial operations such as nose surgery and eyelid surgery,” he tells the Jakarta Globe.

Perbeki itself was established in 1985 when the Ministry of National Education decided medical schools should also offer skin surgery as a specialization program for prospective dermatologists.

“I believe aesthetic surgery is no longer exclusively the domain of plastic surgeons,” Djoko says. “General practitioners and dermatologists who have taken courses on aesthetic surgery can also perform beauty-enhancement procedures.”

Most doctors are taught about the basics of surgery in medical school anyway, he adds.

“Besides, dermatology is related to aesthetics because we deal with the skin — just as ophthalmologists can do cosmetic eye surgery and ear-nose-throat doctors can do a nose job,” he says.

According to the Indonesian Association of Plastic Surgeons (Perapi), there are only 104 registered plastic surgeons in Indonesia, or a tenth of its membership of more than 1,000.

In addition, the medical schools at Jakarta’s University of Indonesia and Surabaya’s Airlangga University are the only ones in the country that teach plastic surgery. At most, only six to eight plastic surgeons in total graduate from the two universities each year.

“Aesthetic surgery isn’t actually included in the top three of primary needs,” says Dr. Siti Handhayani, from Perapi. “Those who feel the need and have the money to do it constitute less than 1 percent of Indonesia’s population.”

Her colleague, Dr. Kristaninta Bangun, says the growing demand for plastic surgery is the result of greater public access to information. “From 24-hour fashion-related TV to news of famous people having procedures done, the public has became more and more familiar with cosmetic surgery,” he says.

Cipto Mangunkusumo General Hospital (RSCM) in Central Jakarta says it has received a steady stream of patients seeking cosmetic surgery since 2007.

A study by Perapi that same year showed the country’s cosmetic surgery industry had grown by 400 percent since 2005.

“Originally, our pro bono plastic surgery department was established in 1998 to help the victims of illegal silicone injections, or to offer reconstructive procedures for patients suffering from heavy burns or cleft lips,” says Sutrisna, an administrator at RSCM’s plastic surgery department.

Today, however, more and more people are coming in for purely aesthetic reasons, he says.

According to Sutrisna, the department carries out at least one procedure a day, although most of the operations there are still reconstructive surgery.

“The ratio between the aesthetic and reconstructive surgeries that we do here is one-to-three,” he says.

Because aesthetic procedures at the hospital are less expensive than at specialist clinics, it sees a lot of business from people who might not seem like obvious candidates. “Those who come for aesthetic surgery are usually from the low-income bracket,” Sutrisna says.

There are at least 20 clinics and hospitals in Jakarta and Tangerang with at least one registered plastic surgeon, and 27 elsewhere in the country.

Aesthetic Doctors

Dr. Juli Karijati Njoto, a spokeswoman for the Indonesian Association of Aesthetic Doctors (Perdesti), dismisses the idea that GPs are muscling in on the lucrative market for plastic surgery and dermatology.

“Since low-income people are beginning to take an interest in beauty treatments, GPs are on the front line to provide correct information to the public,” she says.

Established in 2006, Perdesti now has more than 800 members. Juli says the association is not an academic institute and seminars do not qualify members to perform certain procedures.

“The association is more of a gathering where doctors can trade information,” she says.

Regional health offices are responsible for issuing permits for beauty clinics, which fall under the category of “specialist group practices” and are distinct from dental clinics. In 2009, Jakarta had 140 such clinics registered with its health office.

Permits

Jakarta only last year separated the permit for beauty clinics from that for beauty salons.

“The treatments given to customers at these so-called beauty clinics have grown far more sophisticated and complicated in recent years, so we’ve had to revise the standards,” says Sugeno, head of the health service unit at the Jakarta Health Office.

The new standards, issued in June, list two types of beauty clinics: One supervised by a GP and the other by a specialist such as a plastic surgeon or dermatologist.

“Only those that are supervised by specialists are permitted to carry out plastic surgery,” Sugeno says. “The new guidelines require clinics be under the responsibility of a GP or specialist with training in aesthetic medicine.”

The standards also require clinics to have a written statement of collaboration with a hospital, a schedule of doctors and lists of the medicines and equipment used in the clinic. For their part, regional health officials are required to monitor these clinics to ensure compliance with guidelines.

“A clinic also has to have a team of nurses and at least one pharmaceutical assistant on its payroll, not just beauty assistants,” Sugeno says.

“However, we have limited human resources and there are many such clinics and salons in Jakarta. If anyone finds indications of illegal health or medical practices, they can report it and we will follow up on it.”

Dien Ernawati, head of the Jakarta Health Office, says the terms “salon” and “clinic” are not interchangeable and there are rules in place on classifying the various establishments.

Plastic Surgeons

Dr. Chaula Sukasah, from Perapi, says the problem with GPs and dermatologists taking up plastic surgery is that they are not professionally accountable.

“Plastic surgeons have to study for years to handle complications,” she says. “These other doctors only know how to carry out a procedure, but they won’t know what to do when something goes wrong. ”

Specializing as a plastic surgeon requires 11 years of higher education. Those who graduated before 2000 are also required to undergo another three years of general surgery training.

Dr. Imam Susanto, head of the Jakarta chapter of Perapi, says the association has published a guidebook of 137 safety procedures necessary for plastic surgery, including diagnostics, complications and follow-up.

Dr. Slamet Budiarto, secretary general of the Indonesian Doctors Association (IDI), says only GPs should operate at clinics.

“Specialists should be resident at a hospital and they should be referred to by a GP,” he says.

However, he is in favor of dermatologists carrying out cosmetic surgery or GPs performing simple procedures like Botox, “as long as they are properly trained and have IDI accreditation.”

Slamet says beauty fixes constitute only about 5 percent of a doctor’s total work. “But this 5 percent also makes more money,” he says.

Additional reporting by Elisabeth Oktofani & Yuli Krisna

Our Indonesia On the Stage

The Jakarta Globe

There doesn’t seem to be a lot to laugh about in Yogyakarta these days. University students and activists regularly take to the streets, angry about what they see as an attack by Jakarta on their culture and traditions.


The House of Representatives has been debating a bill that would end the sultan of Yogyakarta’s automatic appointment as governor of the special province. And for most people there, that’s no laughing matter.

But last week, some Yogyakarta artists brought their take on the issue to a different stage, literally. The artists presented the musical-comedy “Laskar Dagelan: From Republik Jogja With Love” (“The Comedy Troop: From the Republic of Yogyakarta With Love”) at Taman Ismail Marzuki in Central Jakarta on March 29 and 30.

The show was part of a series of events for a program called “Indonesia Kita” (“Our Indonesia”).

“The program is designed to be a creative forum where issues like Yogya’s status and Indonesian pluralism can be debated through art,” said Butet Kertaradjasa, one of the program’s founders and an actor in the show.

The musical-comedy, which was largely set in Yogyakarta’s kraton, or palace, marked the first performance in the “Indonesia Kita” series.

Several prominent performers and artists took part in the show, including comedians Susilo Nugroho, Marwoto and Yu Ningsih, singer Show Imah and movie director Hanung Bramantyo.

Not only did “Laskar Dagelan” sell out, it was also attended by the sultan of Yogyakarta, Hamengkubuwono X, and his wife, GKR Hemas.

It was a unique situation, given that most of the show’s plot revolved around the relationship between Hamengkubuwono and the national government.

In November, President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono caused an uproar in Yogyakarta when he said that, as a democracy, Indonesia should no longer recognize the monarchy system.

Yogyakarta’s sultanate is still very much revered by people in that region. While the palace mostly plays a cultural and social role these days, the sultanate played a pivotal role in the country’s independence movement.

The overriding message of “Laskar Dagelan” was that Yogyakarta’s special status should be maintained, but not at the cost of it seceding from Indonesia.

Instead, the show argued, Indonesia’s pluralistic nature should make it possible for Yogyakarta to maintain its special status while still remaining an equal part of the country.

Ananda Adriana, 32, who has lived in Jakarta for eight years but is originally from Yogyakarta, said she really enjoyed the performance.

“My husband told me that there was going to be a musical theater performance by Butet Kertarajasa and friends at Taman Ismail Marzuki, and that Yogyakarta would be the main setting for the story,” Ananda said.

“But what I really loved about the performance were all the Javanese jokes, most of which I hadn’t heard in a long time,” she said.

The organizers of the “Indonesia Kita” series say they plan to continue to take on and address issues that are important to the people on the stage as opposed to out in the streets.

“It will be a bi-monthly event,” Butet said. “Each new chapter will feature a different message regarding Indonesian pluralism. The next chapter will focus on Maluku and its culture.”

“The ‘Indonesia Kita’ program is aimed at highlighting reasons why people should appreciate this country,” he added.

There are, according to organizers, another five musicals that are lined up for the series, which is expected to run through the end of October.

In addition to the theater performances, “Indonesia Kita” will also host a culinary festival designed to show off the many different flavors and dishes of the archipelago.

Police Release Boy, 14, Detained Over $1.15 Phone Card

The Jakarta Globe

The 14-year-old boy detained for 25 days on suspicion of stealing a Rp 10,000 ($1.15) phone card was released on Tuesday, the day after the story was reported by Indonesian media outlets.


Hendrik Sirait, the chairman of the Indonesian legal Aid and Human Right Association (PBHI), told the Jakarta Globe in a text message that the prosecutor had ordered the release of Deli Suhandi and that his arrest be suspended.

Deli’s father Dede said he was happy to have his son back.

“I was told the news from the PBHI lawyer that the prosecutor had ordered the suspension Deli’s detention. Therefore, he can continue his studies and take the final exam,” he said.

“Even though Deli has not been 100 percent cleared, it is good [that he has been released] for the sake of his education. I hope we won’t be bullied by his friends.”

According to police reports, Deli and his friends Rahmat Wibowo and Muhamad Luki were taking cover near a damaged phone-card stall during a riot in their neighborhood. After the riot had ended, the boys were picking up phone cards scattered on the street when somebody shouted at them, accusing them of stealing. The boys threw away the phone cards and ran away as an angry mob chased them. Luki got caught. The next day police arrested Rahmat and Deli at their respective homes.

The police later released Luki and Rahmat, but continued to detain Deli, who was charged with stealing, under a code carrying a maximum of seven years’ jail. After being detained in the precinct for four days, Deli was transferred to the Pondok Bambu Penitentiary.

Houses for Mentawai Victims to Be Completed by 2013

The Jakarta Globe

The government plans to complete the construction of permanent housing for victims of the 2010 Mentawai tsunami by 2013, officials said on Monday.


“We have set aside Rp 1.16 trillion [$133.4 million] for three years of relocation and rehabilitation after the 2010 tsunami,” said Sutopo Purwo Nugroho, a spokesman for the National Disaster Management Agency [BNPB].

“We will use the funds to build temporary housing, permanent housing, and public facilities and infrastructure,” he said.

The Mentawai district chief has announced that the government will build 2,072 temporary houses in three sub-districts — North Pagai, South Pagai and South Sipora — for the 11,432 victims who have lost their homes.

“So far, we have built 1,393 temporary houses in those three districts and are planning to build another 679,” Sutopo said.

“But, seeing as our relocation and rehabilitation program is set until 2013, instead of continuing to build temporary housing, we can see that it would be more efficient to build permanent housing,” he said.

According to Doddy Ruswandi, BNPB’s deputy of field emergency, about Rp 486,000 billion has been earmarked for relocation and rehabilitation projects this year.

He said the main difficulty in the relocation and rehabilitation of people in Mentawai was obtaining building materials.

“Although we have already prepared all the blueprints to rebuild Mentawai, the building materials are hard to find in the new location,” he said.

“Therefore, we have to go all the way to Padang to get the necessary building materials,” he added.

Doddy said the BNPB has also prepared a budget of Rp 13.9 billion for one year to help the tsunami victims regain their social and economic lives.

“We plan to fund development projects in the area via community-based business initiatives, such as fish farming,” Doddy said.

He said the government would also work to rebuild damaged infrastructure to help local communities recover their pre-tsunami lives and livelihoods.

Sutopo said the victims would only live in temporary housing for a couple of years before moving into permanent housing.

“Hopefully, the construction of all permanent houses will be completed by 2013,” he said.

Boy, 14, Behind Bars Over $1.15 Phone Card

The Jakarta Globe

A14-year-old boy has been in jail for 24 days so far, on suspicion of having tried to steal a Rp 10,000 ($1.15) phone card he picked up off the street.


The boy’s distraught father can’t comprehend how his son ended up in the Pondok Bambu Penitentiary, detained along with hardened criminals, for such a petty matter.

Dede Suhandi’s son Deli, an eighth-grade student at the Al-Jihad Junior High School in Central Jakarta, was moved to Pondok Bambu on March 15, four days after being arrested by Johor Baru Police.

According to police reports, Deli and his friends Rahmat Wibowo and Muhamad Luki were taking cover near a damaged phone-card stall during a riot in their neighborhood. After the riot had ended, the boys were picking up phone cards scattered on the street when somebody shouted at them, accusing them of stealing. The boys threw away the phone cards and ran away as an angry mob chased them. Luki got caught. The next day police arrested Rahmat and Deli at their respective homes.

The police later released Luki and Rahmat, but continued to detain Deli, who was charged with stealing, under a code carrying a maximum of 7 years’ jail. After being detained in the precinct for four days, Deli was transferred to the Pondok Bambu Penitentiary.

“Although I just work as an ojek [motorcycle taxi] driver, I’ve always told my children that they must not steal,” Dede said.

“I’m sure my son is a victim of injustice.

“I do not understand the law and I do not understand why the police officer from Johan Baru Resort Police has moved my son to the Pondok Bambu jail and treated him as a bad person, like a terrorist, while this case has not yet been brought to the prosecutors,” he said.

Dede said he asked police officers handling the case to release Deli so he can take the national exam next week, but his request was rejected. “Deli is in junior high school and he has the right to finish his schooling. But it appears the police officer has made things difficult for us. I guess it is because we are poor people.”

Hendra Supriayan, a lawyer from the Legal Aid and Human Rights Association [PBHI] handling Deli’s case, questioned the logic behind charging the teenager under the Criminal Code.

“Instead of bringing Deli’s case to the court, according to the 2009 joint decree of the six government institutions on handling cases of children who violate the law, this kind of case can be solved by being discussed among the witness, victim and the suspect,” Hendra said.

“Therefore, we urge the National Police to instruct the chief of the Johar Baru Resort Police to release or suspend Deli’s detention so he can continue his study.” he said.

Muhammadiyah Appoints Actress to Spread Word on Tuberculosis Danger

The Jakarta Globe

As tuberculosis remains a serious problem across the country, a prominent Muslim organization has appointed an ambassador to begin raising awareness of the debilitating disease.


Aisyiyah, the women’s wing of Muhammadiyah, the second-largest Muslim organization in the country, recently chose actress Mediana Hutomo to inform the public about the dangers of tuberculosis.

Mediana, who was appointed tuberculosis ambassador on Thursday, will spend three months traveling across the archipelago to spread the message about the deadly respiratory disease.

The campaign, which is set to begin late this month, will visit 35 cities and districts in 16 provinces, Aisyiyah chairwoman Noor Rochmah said.

“The reason that we are really concerned about TB [tuberculosis] is because the number of TB cases in Indonesia is quite high,” Noor said on Sunday.

“According to the minister of health, TB causes 346 deaths in Indonesia every day. Therefore, it is very important to raise the awareness among Indonesian society because they do not realize that they may have TB.”

Indonesia has in recent years taken steps to reduce the prevalence of the disease. In December, the Health Ministry said it was optimistic the country could reach the UN Millennium Development Goal on halting and beginning to reverse the incidence of tuberculosis by the 2015 target date.

According to the World Health Organization’s Global Tuberculosis Control data, Indonesia is ranked fifth worldwide in total tuberculosis cases with 429,730. India tops the list, followed by China, South Africa and Nigeria.

That is still a significant improvement from the 2007 figures, when Indonesia’s 528,000 tuberculosis cases placed it third, behind India and China.

Noor said that although Mediana was appointed as Muhammadiyah’s tuberculosis ambassador, she would work with Christian and Buddhist groups to get the word out.

“The main thing here is how society can raise their awareness about TB because so many people sometimes do not recognize TB symptoms, which often appear as an ordinary flu and coughing,” Noor said.

“But as times goes by, the coughing will become coughing blood, the patient will lose weight and it then kills them without being recognized that the coughing was the indication of TB.”

Noor said that after Mediana’s initial three-month tour concludes, the campaign will expand to cover an additional 75 cities and districts starting in July.

Expats in Jakarta Get Their Cricket Fix

The Jakarta Globe

Bhagi Anand has been following cricket most of her life, so there was no way she was going to miss Saturday’s showpiece event.


“I was introduced to cricket when I was a child, and I’m passionate about it,” she said.

However, for an Indian national like Bhagi, who has lived in Jakarta for five years, finding a place to watch cricket matches is never an easy task.

For Saturday’s World Cup final between India and Sri Lanka, she decided to watch the match at a bar in South Jakarta.

“I’ve been following the World Cup this year, and I didn’t want to miss the final,” she said.

“It would’ve been better if I could have gone to Mumbai to watch the game firsthand because it’s more fun.”

Indonesia has always been a football country, and cricket has traditionally struggled for attention, both from sports fans and the media.

This can make it tough for cricket fans here, particularly expatriates from cricket-loving countries such as India, England and Australia, who normally resort to the Internet or match broadcasts at bars or other public establishments for their sporting fix.

Mark Johnson, a British national who works for an oil and gas company in Indonesia, said big tournaments like the World Cup brought out the “nationalistic side” of every fan.

“Although England didn’t make it to the final, I still want to watch the final game,” he said. “It’s because when it comes to cricket, everyone becomes nationalistic about their home teams.”

He said he was rooting for Sri Lanka in the final because he favored underdogs.

India beat Sri Lanka by six wickets to win its second World Cup title.

“Even though I’m a British citizen and I’ve been living in India since I was born and India has a good team, I expected Sri Lanka to win,” Johnson said.

“It would be better for a small country to be the winner sometimes,” he added.

Frederick Alloysius, who works as the quality control officer at Aphrodite, a South Jakarta bar that showed the World Cup final, said there was a healthy number of cricket fans in Jakarta, though not a lot of them were Indonesians.

“In the past few years, the number of cricket fans in the city has increased, especially among the Indian, English and Australian communities,” Alloysius said.

Organic Inspiration for Transmigration

The Jakarta Globe
In a bid to tackle unemployment and increase the nation’s food security level at the same time, the government said on Friday that it was in the process of finalizing a transmigration program involving organic farming. 

According to Central Statistic Agency (BPS) data, Indonesia had 8.9 million unemployed and 35 million economically disadvantaged people as of last year.

At the same time, there are 75.5 million hectares of land that can be used for agriculture but so far, only 25.7 million hectares have been used for that purpose, according to Djoko Sidik Pramono, the director for community development and transmigration locations at the Ministry of Manpower and Transmigration. 

The global “back to nature” movement provided the inspiration for the program, he said. 

“The agriculture-based transmigration programs in the past failed to be as popular as the plantation-based transmigration programs. This was because farming products were less profitable than plantation products,” Djoko told reporters at the ministry.

In the 1980s, President Suharto introduced the agriculture-based transmigration program, in which people from Java were sent to areas in Kalimantan and Sumatra to become farmers. 

Later, more people from various provinces moved to Sumatra and Kalimantan to work on plantations after the price of palm oil started to rise. 

“Considering the recent global rise in consumption of organic products, we are now going to develop an organic agriculture-based transmigration program,” Djoko said. 

The government hopes to reduce unemployment rates among skilled laborers by having educated people join the program.  

“Organic agricultural products now mainly come from the United States, Australia and Europe,” he added. 

“We hope there will be many who would be willing to participate in the transmigration program because [the crops] sell at a high price.” 

The program is also aimed at increasing the nation’s food security level, the official said, as it will help the country become less dependent on imported food commodities. 

The government plans to designate 195 transmigration settlement areas all over Indonesia as part of the program. 

Of those, 44 would be used for organic agriculture while the remainder would be used for conventional farming. 

“As soon as the details of this program have been finalized, we are going to bring it to the people’s attention and we hope to employ 12,500 transmigrants each year from all over Indonesia,” Djoko said. 

Facial Reconstruction Needed After Visit From Collectors, Debtor Claims

The Jakarta Globe

Ulma Haryanto, Zaky Pawas & Elisabeth Oktofani

Car dealer Muji Harjo said that there came a time when he could not pay the Rp 12 million ($1,400) bill on his credit card, issued by an international private bank.


When the deadline was up in October 2009, Muji was still unable to pay, so he handed over his 2005 Yamaha Vega motorcycle as collateral. In May, a debt collector rang Muji up and that’s when the real problems started.

“They asked me to meet them, so I did. There were two of them. I told them that I would have the money next month and that had I already given my motorcycle as collateral, Muji said on Friday.

“They responded with something rude. When I asked them what they mean by that, they beat me up.” Muji said the bones around his left eye were fractured in the attack. “I wore glasses at that time. I was lucky I didn’t go blind because the [lens] broke.”

Muji was taken to Boromeus Hospital in Bandung, West Java, where he his injuries were noted in a police report. He was hospitalized for three days and wound up spending Rp 70 million on surgery.

“My facial bones had to be reconstructed,” Muji said. “I had two witnesses who backed up my statement … However, until now the police have not been able to arrest anyone,” he said.

“Since there was no settlement offer from the bank, last month I filed my case at Bandung District Court,” he said. Under certain circumstances outsourced debt collectors are legal, according to a 2009 circular from Bank Indonesia.

David Tobing, Muji’s legal advisor, said the circular stipulated that debt collection should not be carried out in violation of the law. Tulus Abadi, chairman of the Indonesian Customer Protection Foundation (YLKI), said a lack of internal monitoring in the banking industry and weak customer protection made the debt collecting business appear to be above the law.

“They terrorize customers,” Tulus said.

The last time the YLKI opened an exclusive helpline for credit card services was in 2005. “Even at that time the top complaint was debt collectors. We had one female customer complaining that debt collectors sent faxes to her office several times a day, calling her a whore,” he said.

“When there are a lot of people who are unable to pay credit card bills, then they should assess and evaluate their card policy. Maybe they should be less aggressive in their promotions.”