Common Scams and Care Failures

Travelling abroad for medical care can save money and offer fast access to treatments, but it also carries serious risks. In Türkiye, hundreds of UK patients each year undergo procedures ranging from cosmetic surgery and dentistry to weight-loss operations and hair transplants. While many clinics operate legally and to a high standard, there have also been cases of unlicensed operators, hidden costs, aggressive sales tactics, inadequate aftercare, and even preventable deaths.
Scam Watch tracks recent reports, scandals, and safety alerts covered in UK media. This page aims to help you recognise red flags before it’s too late. Here you’ll find real cases, news stories, and practical guidance so that you can make informed decisions — and avoid becoming the next headline.
Rushed Operations & ‘Surgery Packages’
A British woman died after undergoing a surgery involving a BBL, liposuction and tummy tuck, with the doctor leaving midway surgery, the Telegraph reports The procedure that should normally have taken six hours was completed within an hour and 45 minutes.
The case highlights the dangers of rushed cosmetic operations performed without proper supervision, where patient safety is sacrificed for speed and commercial gain
Unsafe Promotions: Surgery ‘Deals’ Outside Medical Settings
A Sun investigation revealed that Turkish doctors were hosting informal cosmetic surgery “roadshows” in UK hotels—offering BBLs alongside flights and hotel stays. Patients were pressured with steep discounts and RSVP deadlines, yet received only rushed and invasive examinations from unqualified staff.
Avoid doctors who seek patients outside regulated clinics. High-risk procedures should never be promoted in hotels or apartments
Infection Risk & Inadequate aftercare
Irish surgeons report a surge of patients returning from Turkey with severe complications and antibiotic-resistant “superbug” infections. Four Irish people have already died this year (2023) after bariatric or cosmetic surgery, including a young mother following a weight loss procedure. Experts warn that some clinics rush patients onto planes within days of major surgery, despite risks of blood clots and sepsis.
Never assume foreign clinics follow the same safeguards as at home. Flying soon after surgery can be fatal.
When Cheap Treatment Costs More
Drawn in by a £2,000 hair transplant offer in Turkey, a UK patient expected a surgeon-led operation. Instead, he was briefly assessed before being handed over to a team of technicians. The procedure left him with heavy bleeding, swelling, and eventually a patchy, unnatural hairline. Months of chasing the clinic brought little help. To fix the damage, he had to undergo a second transplant in the UK — costing £6,500.