Thousands of people flock toTurkeyeach year to undergo cheaper cosmetic procedures. Referred to as “medical tourists,” they often includeLGBTQIA+(abbreviated LGBTQ+) identifying people who travel from Western countries to seek gender-affirming procedures among other treatments that would otherwise be harder to get in their country of origin. Nevertheless, medical tourism can also sometimes lead to dangerous experiences, as well as highlight disparities between locals and privileged travelers.
HighlightsThousands travel to Turkey as “medical tourists” for cheaper cosmetic surgeries, including LGBTQ+ individuals seeking gender-affirming procedures.Tia Latham and Charley Grabczak underwent multiple surgeries in Turkey due to lower costs.Medical tourism raises concerns about inequality and access to healthcare for local Turkish citizens versus privileged Westerners.
Tia had a “360 Liposuction with butt augmentation,” priced at £3,600, and a £3,300 rhinoplasty.
Meanwhile, Charley had a £1,700 surgery to modify his forehead, a £3,300 rhinoplasty, and a £2,700 neck liposuction. He also paid £4,500 for a full mouth of 28 dental crowns with laser gum surgery.
“We are going back for more,” Tia toldBored Pada.
Image credits:Michael Jerrard/Unsplash
According to theNHS, the cost of a nose reshaping (rhinoplasty) in the UK ranges from £4,000 to £7,000. The NHS also states that liposuction ranges in price from about £3,000 to £8,500, depending on where you go and the body areas being treated.
Tia, who has previously stated that, as an intersex woman, she’s had a transgender experience, her plastic surgeries have been “absolutely gender reaffirming.”
Charley had a £1,700 surgery to modify his forehead, a £3,300 rhinoplasty, and a £2,700 neck liposuction
Image credits: Provided to Bored Panda
According toEvisa-to-Turkey,new statistics have revealed a significant shift in the number of individuals traveling to Turkey for health-related tourism. In 2012, there were 240,000 medical tourists, but this number skyrocketed to 1,258,000 in 2022.
Nevertheless, such tourism has also brought concerns about inequality.
“I can easily say that the access and the enjoyment of the rights to trans-specific healthcare are not the same for Turkish citizens and foreigners,” Janset Kalan, general coordinator at Turkish LGBTQ solidarity organizationPink Life, said.
She told Bored Panda in an email: “The prices for so-called elective surgeries, such as face feminization, hair transplant, medical fillers, breast augmentation, mastectomy, etc., seem to be cheaper for the Westerners because of the devaluation of Turkish currency.”
Tia had a “360 Liposuction with butt augmentation,” priced at £3,600, as well as a £3,300 rhinoplasty
Janset further highlighted thattransgenderindividuals in Turkey typically struggled to secure employment due to widespread discrimination, with many resorting to sex work for survival, ultimately facing limited access to gender-affirming surgeries.
“These surgeries are affordable only to a certain number of us who are able to live above the upper-middle class,” she said.
“Turkish state or government policies in regard to healthcare services are not at all LGBTQ+ inclusive,” she added.
Moreover, medical tourism has also been scrutinized within politics due to a number of individuals facing complications from cosmetic procedures abroad, placing a burden on the NHS at times.
Earlier this month, theDaily Mailreported that a 28-year-old woman died after undergoing a botched gastric band surgery inTurkey.
“We are going back for more,” Tia told Bored Panda
Image credits: Tia Latham (Provided to Bored Panda)
John McNally, a Scottish National Party member of parliament, reportedly said, “Many gruesome deaths have occurred following cosmetic surgery in Turkey, including my own constituent, 28-year-old Shannon, whose family witnessed the most agonizing, horrific death as Shannon lay on a table for some nine hours convulsing.”
But to Tia and Charley, such worries shouldn’t alter the right for people to travel for aesthetic enhancements.
“All surgeries cosmetic or not are risky and complex and it’s your personal choice to have a procedure such as aBBLor Rhinoplasty abroad,” Charley wrote in an email.
He continued: “Cosmetic surgerycan have a profound positive impact on someone’s mental health and confidence, especially those suffering from body dysmorphia within the LGBTQ+ community.”
Politicians highlighted deaths from cosmetic surgery in Turkey, while Tia and Charley defended the right to travel abroad as medical tourists
In November 2023, the UK government said it would meet with officials in Turkey to discuss regulations around medical and cosmetic tourism following several deaths.
Moreover, in 2018, the UK banned Brazilian butt lifts (BBL) in a four-year moratorium, which was lifted in 2022 following the release of new safety guidelines.
Charley defended the right to travel abroad for aesthetic procedures, emphasizing personal choice and mental health benefits
As a result of the ban, Tia said the price for the procedure available in the UK has become “some of the highest prices in the world.” She has since undergone the procedure at a more affordable rate in Turkey from a plastic surgeon called Dr Hakan Demirel.
Tia continued: “Procedures are extremely important in regard to gender-affirming care as it not only helps individuals with gender dysphoria but also increases self-confidence which ultimately makes assimilating into society easier.”
Gender dysphoria is a term that describes a sense of unease that a person may have because of a mismatch between their biological sex and their gender identity,NHSstates.
A 28-year-old woman recently died after undergoing a botched gastric band surgery in Turkey
Image credits:Shannon Bowe
Charley added: “Some gay people find it difficult to find the finances and confidence to go ahead with cosmetic procedures, but it ultimately comes down to high beauty standards within the LGBTQ+ community and society as a whole.
“I am lucky enough to be able to facilitate these procedures but not everyone in my community is in a position to do so.”
Nevertheless, both Tia and Charley warned that traveling abroad for medical purposes should follow “due diligence.”
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