Buttock enlargement surgery – also known as a Brazilian butt-lift (BBL) – is the fastest-growing cosmetic surgery procedure but also one of the most dangerous. This week, a coroner said she would write to the government to try to prevent any more deaths after Melissa Kerr, 31, died in Turkey during an operation – so what is the appeal of the surgery?
Ms Kerr, from Gorleston, in Norfolk, died at a private hospital in Istanbul, in November 2019 while undergoing the procedure.
A fatal clot travelled to her lungs after fat taken during a liposuction procedure was injected into her buttocks.
She handed over £3,200 in cash for the surgery, but at the Norwich inquest coroner Jacqueline Lake found Ms Kerr was not given enough information to make a safe decision about the procedure.
Ms Lake says she will now be writing a “prevention of future deaths” report in the hope fatalities of cosmetic surgery tourists “can be prevented by way of better information”.