The Australian Society
of Plastic Surgeons is warning residents about traveling overseas for
cheaper surgical options after one man died just days after undergoing
multiple procedures. Leigh Aiple, who spent thousands on back-to-back
procedures in Malaysia, had experienced chest pain, leg swelling and
open wounds upon returning home, News.com.au reported.
“When he came home, there were gaping holes, there was stitching everywhere,” Grace Muscat, Aiple’s mother, told news.com.au.
Aiple, 31, had arranged to undergo a tummy tuck, liposuction, an
upper eye lift, a chin tuck, lip filler, thigh lift and chest sculpting
in Malaysia in 2014 through Gorgeous Getaways, a New Zealand-based
medical travel agency. The procedures were performed at Beverly Wilshire
Medical Centre in Kuala Lumpur. While he had complained of
complications before leaving Malaysia, he was allowed to fly
home, news.com.au reported.
Aiple’s mother called for an ambulance after he complained of chest
pain, but he was pronounced dead an hour later. Victoria’s coroner found
that Aiple had died of pulmonary thromboembolism associated with deep
vein thrombosis, and air travel had increased the risk, news.com.au
reported.
“Is anything worth
risking your life for? I’d say no,” Hugh Bartholomeusz, president of the
Australian Society of Plastic Surgeons, told news.com.au.
Bartholomeusz also asked Australians lured by the idea of a cheap
deal to weigh the risks of recovering away from home in a foreign
country, and to consider the tax strain they put on others after
returning home with complications.
“Often these people can’t afford to have treatment in the private
system after paying for previous surgery and are then seen in the public
system on an [as-needed] basis,” he told news.com.au.
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