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Turkey with the good hair

2025/1/31
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Today, Explained

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Adam Hurley
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Alex Abad-Santos
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David Viquist
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Sean Rameswaram
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Sean Rameswaram: 我对人们去土耳其做头发移植的看法很好,虽然我不喜欢医疗旅游,但我认为土耳其的头发移植是一个例外。价格低廉是主要原因,许多人都去土耳其做了头发移植手术。 我听说过很多朋友去土耳其做头发移植,这已经成为了一种流行趋势,甚至有人用“去土耳其”来暗指做头发移植手术。 Alex Abad-Santos: 土耳其头发移植的兴起,一部分原因是土耳其一直拥有良好的医疗保健体系和基础设施,这吸引了医生从事头发移植手术。随着口碑的传播,越来越多的人前往土耳其进行头发移植,最终使土耳其成为头发移植的代名词。 这种趋势在社交媒体上非常流行,已经成为一种流行文化现象。许多男性都前往土耳其进行头发移植,这不仅仅是普通人的行为,一些名人也这样做。 这项手术的流行也与男性美容潮流的兴起有关,许多社交媒体内容都展示了在土耳其进行头发移植的经历。 Adam Hurley: 在伊斯坦布尔做头发移植手术非常便宜,价格远低于美国。虽然伊斯坦布尔的一些诊所有“头发工厂”的声誉,但这也有其优势,因为技术进步使得头发移植手术的成本降低。 在伊斯坦布尔做头发移植,你会得到全方位的服务,包括机场接送、酒店住宿和全程的细致照顾。手术过程包括剃发、麻醉、提取毛囊和植入,大约90%的毛囊会存活。 手术后头部会出血并被包扎,几天后会结痂。在土耳其,你会看到很多人和你一样,这会让你感觉不那么奇怪。许多酒店与诊所合作,形成了一种特殊的集体感。 David Viquist: 医疗旅游是一个全球性的现象,涵盖范围很广,包括美容手术、生育治疗、代孕、药品旅游、安乐死旅游和变性手术旅游等。无论贫富,人们都参与其中,他们追求的是性价比高的医疗服务。 医疗旅游是一个古老的趋势,在古埃及时期就已经存在。现在,医疗旅游已经发展成为一个巨大的产业,规模可能达到万亿美元。 然而,医疗旅游也存在一些风险,特别是对于经济条件较差的人来说,安全问题和语言障碍等问题可能会加剧风险。

Deep Dive

Chapters
Turkey has become a global hub for hair transplants, attracting patients due to its affordability and high-quality medical services. The trend has exploded on social media, with many men traveling to Turkey for the procedure, and it's become a sort of meme. This chapter explores the reasons behind Turkey's popularity as a hair transplant destination, including its reputation for skilled doctors and modern infrastructure.
  • Turkey's low prices for hair transplants attract many patients.
  • Word-of-mouth marketing and social media have fueled the trend.
  • The procedure in Turkey is often marketed as a luxurious experience.

Shownotes Transcript

Translations:
中文

Have you seen people on social media talking about going to Turkey? I'm going to Turkey, baby. Thoughts on people going to Turkey for these hair implants? Very, very good. Okay. Turkey is really, you know, I'm not a big fan of medical tourism. I was on Nightline talking about medical tourism, the dangers of medical tourism. But Turkey and hair transplants, they aren't. There are five reasons why I chose Turkey for my hair transplant.

Reason number one is, of course, price. Turkey is one of the cheapest places you can go to to get your hair transplant done. Every single **** I know has gone to Turkey. To get the transplant? Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. Like, RuPaul has a euphemism for dying, say, you know, so-and-so has left for Paris. And I say, well, she's gone to Turkey. Men are going to Turkey, and they're not going to see the Hagia Sophia. We're going to look into what's going on in Istanbul on Today Explained.

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Turkey! X-Flight!

Alex Abad-Santos, you wrote a piece for Vox.com about a trend I've seen on social media lately. Men traveling to Turkey for hair transplants. You see people going, oh, he went to Turkey or Turkey did him a solid. Wow, Turkey really ate with that hair. Why is everyone saying this all of a sudden? Is it all of a sudden or have people been saying this forever? I mean, Turkey really ate with that hair. It's pretty good.

I like the idea that the entire country of Turkey just decided to make this man's hair really great. I think there's a lot of male beauty that's obviously popped up, a lot of style. And I think one of the things that kept popping up for my algorithm was, I just got a hair transplant in Turkey, here's what it is. And then it eventually became like this meme and it's like ironic joke of like,

guys in Turkey who have all, like, bleeding skulls. So I think it's becoming, like, this pop culture thing that, like, Turkey is a place for hair transplants, whether it's, like, social media or celebrity gossip or celebrity gossip and social media together. Huh? There's a lot of Turkey. You're just flooded with Turkey. Okay, because regular people are going to Turkey for hair transplants, but celebrities are doing it, too? I mean, do we want to talk about the celebrities we think we had it, allegedly? I don't want to laugh at that.

We don't want to blow up people's spots, right? Right, right. Let's punch up. Tom Brady definitely had a hair transplant situation, right? I think he might have had some. I think one of the people that keeps getting brought up into this conversation, and God bless, and I think this is a compliment, it's Andrew Garfield. All of a sudden, Andrew Garfield is like, maybe he got a new hairstylist, maybe it's Propecia, maybe it's some kind of thing, but everyone's like, wow, this man's hair is...

has gotten a lot better in the last like five years. Maybe it's Maybelline. Or maybe it's Turkey. Okay, let's leave him alone. Let's talk less about Andrew Garfield and more about Turkey because you wrote a great explainer for Vox.com about the whole Turkey phenomenon. Why Turkey? So yeah, that's basically the question I wanted to know.

What I found out is that it's a little bit of like a chicken and the egg. You sure it's not a turkey and an egg? A turkey and an egg, I guess. Basically what had happened was Turkey had always kind of like this influx of good healthcare. And that translates into a lot of like doctors that are practicing and a lot of like good infrastructure, right?

And what happened was those doctors started doing hair transplants. And as it got more popular, all this word of mouth kind of grows and grows. And people start going there and start making Turkey a destination. And basically, Turkey's hair transplants in Istanbul have become synonymous with each other. And it's just like a brand now. I think one of the things that's kind of fascinating is that this is the one...

procedure that men have. And it's like, okay, well, the men have this one thing. They have this hair transplant and they're all going to Turkey. And I think also one of the weirdest things is that it's now being treated kind of like a bachelor party. All these places are very luxury. They serve brunch. They drive you around in Mercedes Benzes. It's a luxury experience, which feels more like Vegas than a hair transplant. Yeah.

I am Adam Hurley. I've been a grooming journalist for about 13 years. I cover the men's beauty industry. I write about all things that might be cosmetics. They could be procedures, topicals, things like hair transplant. It's a big umbrella, but I try to cover it all as a generalist. The cost of a hair transplant is extremely expensive. Your insurance is not going to cover this. And if you go to a place like Istanbul,

It has the reputation of being a hair mill, but that's to its benefit too.

Exactly how large Istanbul's hair clinic industry is, is impossible to pin down. Actually, now Istanbul is seeing the capital of the hair transplants. There are hundreds of clinics across Turkiye that offer hair transplants, bringing in hundreds of thousands of mainly men from around the world each year. If you go to the place where they're just pumping out hair transplants over and over and over, and the technology has gotten so good, your hair transplant doesn't need to cost as much.

Let's say you're going to do the average hair transplant. That in Istanbul might cost you somewhere between $3,000 and $5,000. But in the US, depending on the zip code, could cost you anywhere between $20,000 and $50,000 or upwards of that. And to be honest, I just have a really hard time recommending anyone spend that much money on something when there is a much more affordable option in a city that has so many world-class doctors.

Okay, so you're looking to drop $3,000 or $5,000 on a trip to Turkey to get new hair. I'm guessing that's without airfare, of course. What do you get for that when you show up? You would have them picking you up at the airport. They would be shuttling you to and from your hotel to the clinic. You would have a really clear itinerary.

You should feel like you are in great hands all the way through being looked after. And typically that will include hotel. And so you're looking at the hospitality, the transportation and the care as well as the procedure itself. Which clinic did you choose? What was it called? My clinic is Dr. Sirkin Eigen. Come to Turkey, find your way.

Okay, so when you get to Dr. Cirkin Eigen, what does he do? How does this process work exactly?

Okay, so you don't necessarily have to buzz your hair. If you're fine buzzing your hair and you're not being secretive about your hair transplant, I would encourage you to do so. It makes it a lot more rewarding, I think, to see the entire process go through. So they will, let's say they're buzzing you down.

And then what they're going to do is they're going to anesthetize you. And you can choose different versions of that, but they're really not going to fully put you under so that you can sort of come to if need be. And what they're going to do is they're going to extract follicles uniformly from the back of your head, whereas they typically used to take a strip of skin from the back and that would leave a scar. Now they're taking it more uniformly. It's going to heal up.

and they've got little pens that make clean incisions. They can plant it at the optimal angle, and then each graft can grow naturally as it would a normal hair. And about 90% of these will survive, assuming you do all the proper protocol in the month following as the scalp is recovering.

What does your head look like when you walk out of this procedure? It is bloody. It has been bandaged up because they've got a big diaper type thing over the back and sides of your head where they took all the grafts from.

And then you are really bloody up top. And then you're going to scab over. Mine almost turned into this uniform scab helmet over the next few days. Wow, uniform scab helmet. Yeah, and it takes about 10 to 15 days to slowly loosen itself. Are there a lot of dudes walking around

Turkey with uniform scab helmets? Yeah, but it takes a few days for the scab helmet to form. I mean, the pictures you see on social media, the Turkish hairline strokes, that's accurate. When you realize that not everybody went to Turkey for vacation. Turkish Airlines, Turkish hairlines. And one thing I have to say is that's a really encouraging thing to see if you are going there because you're not going to feel weird.

No one's going to look at you weird in the airport on your flight home. And you see guys with fresh hair transplants, like just, you know, staring at the Galata Tower in Istanbul and just out having dinner. Personally, I would just order dinner and stay in the hotel room.

to each their own. But it is a very surreal and weird thing, but it's reassuring when you're in such a vulnerable state to see so many other people doing it. And even the hotels, a lot of times, they have partnerships with these clinics. So it's this weird, sad, but also shared feeling

feeling when you look around the hotel brunch and it's all people who either had a hair transplant the previous day or who are about to go have a hair transplant in an hour. There's this really nice camaraderie that's there of all these people from all different countries around the world. Because like what? Because balding is something we're made to feel ashamed of and here you're seeing people who are embracing their desire to have hair again. Is that what you're saying?

I don't think it's that balding is something we should be ashamed of. I don't think we should be ashamed of it, but I think it's something that maybe we are made to feel ashamed. Yeah, I agree with you there. I think it's a sign of virility or vitality or something. Youthfulness, sure. ♪

I also just think if you have the option of having hair, you can always shave it off and rock a bald look. But if you are bald, that's a period. There's punctuation on the amount of things you can have. And that was a big reason I wanted a hair transplant in the first place is I'm a grooming editor. I have to have a canvas to try products and to...

You know, I grew my, I grown my hair to my shoulders twice since my hair transplant, just so I can try blow dryers and hair creams and all these different things. And if I lost that, I do lose my virility as a grooming editor, you know? Totally.

Adam's kind of locked into his procedure for life. He told us he'll be taking hair growth meds to keep his new hair, even with his old hair, until he dies. His new transplanted hair, even with his, you know, natural hair. That's a big commitment. I assume you haven't had this procedure, Alex? I have not had a hair transplant. So as a reporter who's written about this procedure but hasn't done it himself, can you just tell us, you know, from...

from your,

objective vantage. Does the transplant look good? I mean, compared to transplants from back in the day, from all the research I've done for this story, yes, they look pretty good. They're very unclogable. Everyone I spoke to says the only person who can tell is my barber. And I think that is possibly the biggest compliment that you can get for a hair transplant. No one can tell, only my barber can tell.

Especially when you compare it to the 80s, there were lots and lots of advertisements for hair plugs and there was a lot of hair restoration stuff that did not look good. But what I guess the biggest difference is they figured out, or doctors have figured out better ways to extract hair follicles and put them in places. Back in the 80s, they were taking clusters of hair

and transplanting them to a new spot. And they didn't really know what the hair was growing or how the patterns of the hair. And so it would kind of look like doll hair. And that is a term that you want to avoid. You never want your hair to look like doll hair. I think people would rather be bald than have doll hair. Alex Abad-Santos from Vox.com. Adam Hurley from blue-print.co. Adam also writes for GQ.com.

Traveling for your cosmetic needs or even your medical needs is nothing new, but it certainly is more popular than ever. We're going to find out just how popular it is next on Today Explained.

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This week on Prof G Markets, we speak with Robert Armstrong, US financial commentator for the Financial Times. We discuss Trump's comments on interest rates and who might emerge as the biggest winners from the deep-seek trade. In the world we lived in last Friday...

Having a great AI model behind your applications either involved building your own or going to ask OpenAI, can I run my application on top of your brilliantly good AI model? Now maybe this is great for Google, right? Maybe this is great for Microsoft, who

who were shoveling money on the assumption that they had to build it themselves at great expense. You can find that conversation and many others exclusively on the Prof G Markets podcast.

Today Explained is back. I'm Sean Rommelstrom and I'm joined by David Viquist. He's the director of the Center for Medical Tourism Research at the University of the Incarnate Word in San Antonio, Texas. David, you study medical tourism. Does that include the more cosmetic stuff we talked about earlier in the show?

Absolutely, yeah. We look at a variety of, if you will, kind of patient consumerism that's occurring throughout the world, not only traveling for cosmetic surgery, but traveling for fertility treatments, traveling for surrogacy. Speaking of that, been in the news here recently, which is birth tourism, which is people going to other countries, for example, people from Latin America coming into the United States to have children in the U.S., so they have dual citizenship rights.

Also the idea of pharmacy tourism, which we see, for example, Americans purchasing pharmaceuticals in Canada. Also deaf tourism, people traveling to either in the United States, certain states that allow doctor-assisted suicide, or people that go internationally to places like Switzerland.

also including gender change or gender reassignment surgery. Some of the best surgeons in the world are located in the country of Iran. Now I just think we should stop talking about everything we're talking about and just talk about how that happened. ♪

It's a really interesting and controversial topic. So it's illegal to be gay in Iran, and it's sometimes punishable by death. However, if you were to undergo gender reassignment surgery, it is legal to be trans,

And so many of the surgeons in Iran actually ended up helping people with these transitions and they became some of the most successful and competent surgeons on this surgery in the world.

So because of that, because of this expertise that grew within the country, again, because people felt this pressure to get these gender reassignment surgeries in the country, people from around the world traveled to Iran, a religious theocracy, to be able to get these surgeries. And it's just a very fascinating story.

It sounds like, from what you're saying, from that brief tour you gave us of all the medical tourism, cosmetic tourism, health tourism, whatever you want to call it, going on around the world, if we just took...

Like a look at a world map and had sort of flight trackers for all of the flights that were taken for these kinds of purposes, we would see like a fully colored in world map of people going from this continent to that and the other for various procedures. That's correct. Yeah.

People are wanting the value equation in health care, which means they want the health care they want at the price that they want, at the time that they want, where they want. It tends to be that both affluent people that have disposable income, the wealthy, tend to travel more for medical tourism. And also we see the...

less economically well-off people, people that don't have as much disposable income, they also travel more often. So you're saying this is something that rich people do, certainly, but it's also something that poor people do. Yes. Yeah, it's really fascinating. So where I'm at here in South Texas...

We're very familiar with the trend because in the Rio Grande Valley, which is on the southern border of Texas with the northern border of Mexico, we have some of the poorest counties in all of Texas. And we also have a shortage of particularly primary care physicians there.

in those regions and so these are some of the the poorest and less economically well-off people in all of the united states and they travel frequently into mexico for access to pharmaceuticals at the pharmacy for dental and also for medical care and it's very common so that that

tends to, if you will, show this consumerism that's going on. Again, you can understand it with the wealthy because they're looking for perhaps some of the best care on the planet. But when you look at people that are essentially impoverished or in poverty situations, that they're traveling as well. Is there a dark side to this for those who are less wealthy? I mean, if you're rich and you go to Iran for gender reassignment surgery and something goes wrong there,

Maybe you can just easily buy your way out of that situation, but if you're poor, maybe you get stuck, maybe there's a language barrier, and then what? Like, how ugly can this get for people? So we had a situation a little over a year ago now where a group of people drove into Texas and then drove across the border into Mexico. It happened in the border state of Matamoros, just three miles away from Brownsville. They took a trip across the border last week for a cosmetic surgery.

And that's when they were possibly mistaken for a rival cartel. They were chased by gunmen who were opening fire on their white minivan. Now, two people were found dead. The other two survived and are back on U.S. soil recovering this morning. And so that shows you, if you will,

possible safety and security issues of going into a foreign country but we we find from some data for example the cdc looked at uh data from americans in 2016 and they found that the overall self-reported bad outcomes that occurred from the actual surgery itself were about five percent which is actually um uh

reasonable from depending on the type of procedure but there are people that travel internationally and in the past have included people that of wealth and affluence and that could choose any health care they wanted in the United States and

Kobe Bryant traveled to Germany. For healthcare? Yes. Yeah. Alex Rodriguez, when he was with the New York Janchies, traveled. Recently, Kirk Cousins traveled to the Caribbean. And you see probably a lot of Instagram influencers that have traveled to foreign countries to get access to cosmetic surgery. I think that's what brought us here to you is how much social video has blown up this industry. Can you give us a sense of how big it is at this point?

So it's a very large industry. When you look at people traveling domestically, it's very large. And then when you look at the international, when you include health, wellness, dental, cosmetic surgery, all the things that people are traveling for, it's truly hundreds of billions of dollars. It's possibly a $1 trillion industry worldwide.

Interestingly, it's also a very ancient trend. So, for example, when I was helping the Egyptian government by training some Egyptian physicians and hospitals on how to receive international patients,

I went on a Nile cruise is what they provided as the compensation for doing this training. And on the way back from Ashwan up to Cairo, the tour guide had to stop at an ancient temple. And on the temple wall, there was a formulary for...

for these procedures and these potentially medications that were given by the temple priest to people. And it was well known at that time that throughout the world, people would come to Egypt to get access to some of the best medicine in the world. So not only is it a very ancient trend, but it appears to be a trend that keeps coming back over and over again.

Professor David V. Quist, University of the Incarnate Word. Heidi Mawagdi produced our show today. He was edited by Jolie Myers, fact-checked by Laura Scabhelmet Bullard, and mixed by Andrea Christensdottir and Mr. Rob Byers, who's saying goodbye to Vox today. He's been a friend of Today Explained since the show's inception seven years ago, and we hope he'll continue to be one hereafter.

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Breakmaster Cylinder makes music, and I made a mistake. On Monday's show, I said there's no Silk Road movie, but it turns out there is a Silk Road movie. It's called Silk Road, and seven people saw it when it came out in 2021. Maybe after this correction, it could be eight. I apologize. Today Explained is distributed by WNYC, and the show is a part of Vox.

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