The Scotsman

Call to end ‘fly-in-fly-out’ plastic surgery

● Leading plastic surgeon says weak regulation putting patients at risk

- By ILONA AMOS iamos@scotsman.com

The Scottish Government’s adviser on plastic surgery has warned that weak regulation allowing “fly-in, fly-out” surgeons to carry out operations is putting patients at risk, leaving the NHS to pick up the pieces if things go badly.

Speaking to reporters for the new BBC documentar­y Disclosure: When Cosmetic Surgery Goes Wrong, consultant plastic surgeon Ken Stewart says a certificat­ion scheme for cosmetic surgeons should be mandatory.

“The regulation in my view is such that people can still do inappropri­ate things in inappropri­ate environmen­ts, with inappropri­ately trained staff,” he said.

Mr Stewart is one of the few surgeons to be certified.

He said existing regulation was not “robust” and leaves patients vulnerable.

The film investigat­es Transform, the leading High Street cosmetic surgery provider, which carries out thousands of operations each year.

The company uses doctors from abroad, who come to the UK to operate and then leave. This means surgeons are sometimes no longer in the country to treat their patients if complicati­ons occur, which can result in poor continuity of care and difficulti­es in securing compensati­on.

Transform said use of “world-class internatio­nal surgical expertise” is “commonplac­e” across healthcare providers, including the NHS, and the firm took “absolute responsibi­lity” for patients.

But the film, which airs tonight on BBC One Scotland, found patients have been left permanentl­y scarred and unable to get compensati­on. Many have been forced to turn to the NHS for help.

Experts say patients can be left exposed because the UK and Scottish government­s have failed to act on the key recommenda­tions of two major reviews – despite the fact the first was published six years ago.

The 2013 Keogh Review concluded the regulation of cosmetic surgery was poor and warned vulnerable patients were not protected.

It recommende­d only certified surgeons should be allowed to carry out cosmetic procedures to protect patients from bad practices.

That never happened. Instead a voluntary register was introduced, but fewer than 30 surgeons have signed up to date.

The Royal College of Surgeons told the BBC a mandatory certificat­ion scheme would effectivel­y end fly-in, fly-out surgery.

The Scottish Government told the BBC it would take additional steps to protect patients, including meeting with UK ministers and surgeons’ leaders.

Public health minister Joe Fitzpatric­k said: “Some of this is devolved. Some is reserved.

“I would certainly be up for having that conversati­on to make sure patients are as safe as possible.”

The UK Government did not respond to allegation­s that it has failed to make certificat­ion mandatory. It said all doctors practising in the UK must be registered and have the correct insurance.

 ?? PICTURE: BBC SCOTLAND ?? 0 After four operations, Catherine says her nose was worse than ever
PICTURE: BBC SCOTLAND 0 After four operations, Catherine says her nose was worse than ever
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