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Originally published November 20, 2009 at 12:14 AM | Page modified November 20, 2009 at 12:16 AM

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Senate Democrats want to tax nips and tucks

The White House and Senate Democrats have turned to a proposal to tax breast implants, tummy tucks, wrinkle-smoothing injections and other procedures as they search for ways to pay for health-care overhaul plans.

The Associated Press

Coming up

The Senate on Thursday began what promises to be a lengthy battle over the future of health care in America. Senate Democratic leaders expect the first test vote on their $849 billion health-care overhaul bill will come Saturday. Although Democrats are likely to get the 60 votes they need to move forward with the debate, the outcome is uncertain. Should the measure pass that initial test, lawmakers made it clear Thursday that they're ready for weeks of political warfare. Republicans said the bill would create more bureaucracy and run up the federal debt, and would not make health care more affordable. "We don't need a 2,000-page bill," said Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn. "We need to take it step by step in the right direction to cut health-care costs."

McClatchy Newspapers

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WASHINGTON — They call it the "Botax."

The White House and Senate Democrats have turned to a proposal to tax breast implants, tummy tucks, wrinkle-smoothing injections and other procedures as they search for ways to pay for health-care overhaul plans.

Vanity was an easy target as lawmakers scraped for cash for the nearly $1 trillion plan to expand health care to millions of Americans who lack insurance. But it's no joke to the drugmakers and people who perform the cosmetic nips and tucks. And they're fighting back.

Skin-smoothing Botox injections could be hard-hit. There were some 4.7 million last year and an average cost per visit of about $400, some including several injections.

"It is a random hit on an easy target that is only punitive and not corrective," said Caroline Van Hove, a spokeswoman for Allergan, the maker of Botox Cosmetic. "The bottom line is that taxing cosmetic procedures is unnecessarily punitive on people who have merely decided to enhance their appearance."

At issue is a proposal in the 10-year, $849 billion health-care draft unveiled by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., that would put a 5 percent excise tax on elective cosmetic surgeries and procedures. The plan, projected to raise $6 billion, wouldn't apply to surgery to fix a deformity or injury but would include procedures such as face lifts, liposuction, cosmetic implants or teeth-whitening.

The plastic surgeons may have seemed like an appealing bunch to pick on, given that they had been skeptical of the Democrats' overhaul proposal. But they say it will be a blow to countless American women — of every income level.

"The common misconception is that this is going to tax wealthy, suburban Republican women," said Dr. Phil Haeck, of Seattle, the president-elect of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons. In fact, he said, of the 86 percent of cosmetic-surgery patients who are female, 60 percent have incomes between $30,000 and $90,000.

In addition, he said the tax would be especially hurtful in tough economic times that have prompted many newly jobless women to look for ways to make themselves more marketable to prospective employers. He said, "They're competing with people 10 to 15 years younger than them and they want to look better."

The emergence of the tax in the latest Senate health legislation shows what can happen when an industry or company that's in Congress' cross-hairs isn't vigilant enough.

Dr. Daniel Russo, the Birmingham, Ala., plastic surgeon who heads the American Academy of Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, said his group first heard of the cosmetic-procedure tax idea over the summer. But after being assured by several lawmakers and senior congressional aides that it was not being seriously considered, the group opted not to engage in a major lobbying battle against it, he said.

"On multiple fronts, we were assured that this was not something that any one of the senators or representatives wanted to pursue. This is something that we did not foresee," Russo said.

"We feel it's unfair to those people who've saved hard-earned moneys to have something to improve their appearance, and now may not even be able to afford it," he added.

His group isn't registered to lobby, although the American Society of Plastic Surgeons reported spending nearly $400,000 this year trying to influence Congress. The society, which has two in-house lobbyists, didn't list a plastic-surgery tax among its legislative priorities in disclosures filed on Capitol Hill.

Haeck, president-elect of the society, said industry players whose products would be affected took the lead lobbying against it.

Botox manufacturer Allergan's shares were down more than 2 percent Thursday after news of the tax broke. The company, which recently projected net product sales for this year of more than $4 billion, expects the injectable wrinkle-smoothing medicine to rake in $1.3 billion in 2009. It has spent $1.4 million lobbying Congress on health-care issues this year.

But medical-device and pharmaceutical giant Johnson & Johnson, a maker of breast implants, saw its shares inch up. The company has spent more than $3 million lobbying Congress this year on a wide range of issues, many related to the health overhaul. It was a major player in a successful fight by the medical-device industry to get lawmakers to cut in half a proposed $40 billion tax on its products.

Lobbyists and aides familiar with the proposed 5 percent cosmetic-surgery tax said Allergan and Johnson & Johnson along with others in the industry helped persuade lawmakers to slash it from a 10 percent levy, which had been projected to cost about $11 billion over a decade.

Accounts vary on who first dreamed up the Botax. It came out of a late-July meeting on health care that included Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., the Finance Committee chairman, and Peter Orszag, Obama's budget director, although neither man's staff acknowledges authorship.

Reid revived it simply because "we needed money to make the bill work," his spokesman Jim Manley said.

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