
Obesity surgery in Istanbul from €1,440 all-inclusive. Gastric balloon, sleeve gastrectomy and bariatric procedures at JCI-accredited MedProper Turkey.
Is it safe?
Your hospital holds the same JCI accreditation as Cleveland Clinic and Johns Hopkins. Verified by TEMOS for international patient safety.
Will the price change?
Your price is locked before you book. Surgery, hospital, hotel, transfers, aftercare — one number, no extras.
What if something goes wrong?
Mandatory insurance required by Turkish law. If a revision is needed — flights, hospital, surgeon — covered. You never pay twice.
Who's my surgeon?
Confirmed before you pay. Full credentials, specialisation, and patient results shared upfront. No last-minute switch.
What happens after I fly home?
24/7 WhatsApp with your coordinator. Scheduled video check-ups with your surgeon. 12 months, not 12 days.
Gastric sleeve surgery, known medically as laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy (LSG), is the most commonly performed bariatric procedure worldwide. During the operation, approximately 75-80% of the stomach is permanently removed, leaving a narrow, tube-shaped sleeve roughly the size and shape of a banana. This reduced stomach holds approximately 100-150 millilitres of food, compared to the 1-1.5 litres held by a full-sized stomach.
The procedure works through two complementary mechanisms. First, the dramatically reduced stomach capacity means you physically cannot eat the portions you once did. Second, and equally important, the portion of stomach removed contains the fundus, where the majority of ghrelin (the so-called "hunger hormone") is produced. Published research in the journal Obesity Surgery confirms that ghrelin levels drop by 60-70% following sleeve gastrectomy, substantially reducing appetite and food cravings beyond what restriction alone would achieve.
Gastric sleeve surgery is performed laparoscopically through four to five small incisions, each 5-12 millimetres long. A surgical stapler divides the stomach vertically, and the excised portion is removed entirely from the body. The procedure is irreversible. Unlike gastric banding, there is no foreign device left inside you. Unlike gastric bypass, your intestinal anatomy remains unchanged, which means nutrient absorption is largely preserved.
The operation typically takes 45-75 minutes and is performed under general anaesthesia. Patients remain in hospital for two to four nights for monitoring, leak testing, and early mobilisation.
Gastric sleeve surgery is recommended for adults with clinically severe obesity who have been unable to achieve lasting weight loss through diet, exercise, and medically supervised programmes. According to a 2022 meta-analysis published in The Lancet, bariatric surgery delivers significantly greater and more sustained weight loss than any non-surgical intervention, including the newest GLP-1 receptor agonist medications.
Patients who benefit most include those with:
At MedProper Istanbul, gastric sleeve surgery starts from £1,868 (EUR2,186) in 2026. This is an all-inclusive price covering surgery, hospital stay, hotel accommodation, VIP transfers, pre-operative tests, post-operative medications, and 12-month remote nutritional support. By comparison, UK private gastric sleeve surgery costs £8,000-£13,000.
The mortality rate for laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy at accredited centres is less than 0.1% (approximately 1 in 1,000 to 1 in 3,000 procedures). This is comparable to the mortality rate reported in UK NHS bariatric surgery audits (0.07%). The key safety factor is choosing a JCI-accredited hospital with experienced, IFSO-member surgeons, not the country where surgery is performed.
Get a personalised treatment plan with transparent pricing. No hidden fees, no obligations.
The operation is not cosmetic surgery. It is a medically indicated intervention for a chronic metabolic disease, and the outcomes extend far beyond weight loss: resolution of diabetes, normalisation of blood pressure, elimination of sleep apnoea, reduced cardiovascular risk, and statistically significant improvements in life expectancy.
Eligibility for bariatric surgery differs depending on whether you pursue treatment through the NHS, the UK private sector, or a specialist clinic abroad. Understanding these differences is essential for making an informed decision.
The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) Clinical Guideline CG189, updated in 2024, recommends bariatric surgery for adults who meet all of the following criteria:
In practice, most NHS Clinical Commissioning Groups (CCGs) apply additional restrictions. Many require a BMI of 50 or above for fast-track referral, or a mandatory two-year Tier 3 weight management programme before surgical referral is even considered. The result is that only around 6,000 NHS bariatric procedures are performed annually in England, despite an estimated 2.9 million adults meeting the NICE criteria.
At MedProper Istanbul, our bariatric surgeons follow IFSO international guidelines, which are broader than NHS criteria:
| Criteria | NHS (NICE) | MedProper Istanbul |
|---|---|---|
| Minimum BMI for surgery | 40 (or 35 with comorbidities) | 35 (or 30 with comorbidities) |
| BMI for gastric balloon | Not routinely offered | 27-35 |
| Mandatory pre-surgery diet programme | 6-24 months (Tier 3) | 2-4 week liquid diet |
| Age range | 18-65 typical | 18-65 (case-by-case above 65) |
| Prior weight loss attempts required | Yes (documented) | Yes (medical history review) |
| Psychological assessment | Required | Required (pre-op screening) |
The key difference: patients with a BMI between 30 and 35 who have Type 2 diabetes, metabolic syndrome, or other obesity-related conditions can access surgical treatment in Istanbul, whereas the NHS would not typically offer surgery below a BMI of 35. This aligns with the 2022 IFSO position statement that recommends metabolic surgery for patients with BMI 30-34.9 and poorly controlled Type 2 diabetes.
How to calculate your BMI: Divide your weight in kilograms by the square of your height in metres. For example, if you weigh 110 kg and stand 1.72 m tall: 110 / (1.72 x 1.72) = BMI 37.2. Alternatively, contact our team for a free BMI assessment during your initial consultation.
MedProper offers the full range of surgical and non-surgical weight loss procedures, allowing our bariatric team to recommend the option best suited to your BMI, health profile, and weight loss goals.
The most popular bariatric procedure worldwide, accounting for approximately 55% of all weight loss operations globally. The surgeon removes 75-80% of the stomach laparoscopically, creating a sleeve-shaped tube. The procedure is irreversible, takes 45-75 minutes, and requires a hospital stay of two to four nights.
Best for: BMI 35+ (or 30+ with comorbidities). Patients seeking a single, definitive operation with strong long-term results and lower nutritional supplement requirements than gastric bypass.
Expected weight loss: 60-70% of excess weight within 12-18 months.
The gold standard for patients with higher BMIs or those with Type 2 diabetes. The surgeon creates a small stomach pouch (approximately 30 ml) and reroutes the small intestine to connect directly to this pouch, bypassing the majority of the stomach and the first section of the small intestine (the duodenum).
This dual mechanism, restriction plus malabsorption, produces greater average weight loss than sleeve gastrectomy and higher rates of Type 2 diabetes remission. The procedure takes 90-150 minutes and requires a hospital stay of three to five nights.
Best for: BMI 40+ or BMI 35+ with Type 2 diabetes. Patients who need maximum metabolic impact or who have severe gastro-oesophageal reflux disease (GORD), as bypass resolves reflux in over 90% of patients.
Expected weight loss: 65-75% of excess weight within 12-18 months.
A simplified version of the Roux-en-Y bypass with a single intestinal connection rather than two. The procedure creates a longer, tubular stomach pouch and connects it to a loop of small intestine approximately 200 cm from the ligament of Treitz. Surgery time is 60-90 minutes, and the hospital stay is typically three to four nights.
Best for: BMI 40+ or revision patients. Those who want the metabolic benefits of bypass with a technically simpler operation and shorter surgical time.
Expected weight loss: 65-75% of excess weight within 12-18 months.
A silicone balloon is placed endoscopically (through the mouth, with no incisions) into the stomach and filled with saline to occupy space and create early satiety. The procedure takes 15-20 minutes under light sedation. The balloon remains in place for six to twelve months before endoscopic removal.
Best for: BMI 27-35. Patients who do not meet the criteria for surgical bariatric procedures, those who wish to lose weight before another operation (such as orthopaedic surgery or fertility treatment), or those who prefer a fully reversible, non-surgical option.
Expected weight loss: 10-15% of total body weight over six to twelve months.
Between 15% and 25% of bariatric patients require a revisional procedure within ten years, according to data published in Surgery for Obesity and Related Diseases (SOARD). Common reasons include insufficient initial weight loss, weight regain after initial success, complications such as chronic GORD following sleeve gastrectomy, or band-related issues following gastric banding.
Revision options at MedProper include:
Best for: Patients who have had a previous bariatric procedure that has failed or caused complications. A thorough endoscopic and radiological assessment is performed before any revision to determine the optimal approach.
One of the most significant advantages of having bariatric surgery at MedProper Istanbul is the cost. Our all-inclusive prices are a fraction of UK private fees, with no compromise on surgical standards, hospital accreditation, or aftercare.
| Procedure | MedProper Price | UK Private Price | NHS Wait Time | Your Saving |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gastric Balloon (6-12 month) | From £990 (EUR1,158) | £4,000-£8,000 | Not available on NHS | Up to £7,010 |
| Gastric Sleeve (Sleeve Gastrectomy) | From £1,868 (EUR2,186) | £8,000-£13,000 | 22-34 months | Up to £11,132 |
| Mini Gastric Bypass (One-Anastomosis) | From £2,200 (EUR2,574) | £9,000-£14,000 | 22-34 months | Up to £11,800 |
| Gastric Bypass (Roux-en-Y) | From £2,490 (EUR2,913) | £10,000-£15,000 | 22-34 months | Up to £12,510 |
| Revisional Bariatric Surgery | From £3,000 | £12,000-£18,000 | 24-36 months | Up to £15,000 |
| Clinic | Gastric Sleeve Price (GBP) | All-Inclusive? |
|---|---|---|
| MedProper Istanbul | From £1,868 | Yes |
| Turkey Bariatrics (Antalya) | £2,550-£2,850 | Yes |
| Istanbul Sleeve | £2,550 | Yes |
| Clinic Center | £2,600-£2,900 | Yes |
| GM Care | £1,990-£2,999 | Yes (inc. flights) |
| Clinic Mono | £1,600-£1,700 (USD-converted) | Yes |
At £1,868 all-inclusive, MedProper offers the most competitive gastric sleeve pricing of any JCI-accredited facility in Turkey. This is not a stripped-down package; it includes your surgery, hospital stay, hotel accommodation, all transfers, pre-operative testing, post-operative medications, and 12-month remote nutritional support.
The price difference does not reflect a difference in quality. It reflects structural economic factors:
Your surgeon at MedProper uses the same laparoscopic staplers (Ethicon, Medtronic, or Johnson and Johnson), the same anaesthetic protocols, and the same post-operative monitoring standards as any UK NHS or private bariatric unit.
The decision to have bariatric surgery abroad is significant. The table below provides a factual comparison to help you weigh your options.
| Factor | MedProper Istanbul | UK Private | UK NHS |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cost (gastric sleeve) | From £1,868 | £8,000-£13,000 | Free |
| Waiting time (referral to surgery) | 2-4 weeks | 2-6 weeks | 22-34 months |
| Pre-surgery programme required | 2-4 week liquid diet | Varies | 6-24 months (Tier 3) |
| Hospital stay | 3-4 nights (private room) | 1-2 nights (ward) | 1-2 nights (ward) |
| Hotel accommodation | Included (5 nights) | Not included | N/A |
| Airport and hospital transfers | Included (VIP) | Not included | N/A |
| Surgeon annual case volume | 500+ bariatric procedures/year | 50-200/year | 50-200/year |
| Hospital accreditation | JCI (Joint Commission International) | CQC registered | CQC registered |
| Post-op nutritional support | 12 months (remote video + WhatsApp) | 6-12 months | Lifelong (if available) |
| Companion accommodation | Included | Not included | N/A |
| Minimum BMI for sleeve | 35 (30 with comorbidities) | 35-40 | 40 (35 with comorbidities) |
NHS waiting times for bariatric surgery vary dramatically by region. The following data, compiled from NHS England Referral-to-Treatment statistics and Freedom of Information requests to individual trusts, illustrates the scale of the problem.
| UK Region | Average Wait (Months) | Worst Reported Wait (Months) |
|---|---|---|
| London | 28 | 42 |
| Yorkshire and Humber | 30 | 45 |
| North West England | 26 | 38 |
| West Midlands | 24 | 36 |
| South East England | 25 | 40 |
| Scotland | 22 | 32 |
| Wales | 26 | 38 |
| Northern Ireland | 24 | 34 |
These figures represent the time from GP referral to the date of surgery. They do not include the months or years many patients spend in Tier 3 weight management programmes before being referred for surgical assessment. In total, the journey from first GP appointment to surgical date can exceed four years in some regions.
During that wait, obesity-related conditions continue to worsen. A 2023 study in the British Journal of Surgery found that patients who waited more than 18 months for bariatric surgery had a 34% higher rate of cardiovascular events compared to those who received timely intervention.
For a patient with a BMI of 42 and Type 2 diabetes, waiting 30 months for NHS surgery means 30 months of insulin injections, 30 months of cardiovascular risk, and 30 months of reduced quality of life. At MedProper, the same patient could be assessed, prepared, and surgically treated within three to four weeks of initial contact.
MedProper operates on a transparent, all-inclusive pricing model. Our bariatric package includes everything you need from airport arrival to departure.
Included in your package:
Not included (at your own arrangement):
Understanding exactly what happens during your trip to Istanbul helps reduce anxiety and allows you to prepare properly. Here is a typical seven-day itinerary for a gastric sleeve patient.
Your VIP transfer collects you from Istanbul Airport (IST) and drives you directly to your hotel. After check-in, you meet your English-speaking patient coordinator, who explains the schedule for your stay. The rest of the day is free to rest and settle in.
In the evening, you begin your pre-operative fasting protocol: clear fluids only from midnight.
Your transfer collects you from the hotel early in the morning and takes you to the hospital. The day proceeds as follows:
Your companion can wait in the hospital during surgery and stay with you in your private room afterwards.
The post-operative diet is one of the most important elements of your long-term success. Following the plan precisely during the first three months protects the staple line, prevents complications, and establishes new eating habits that will serve you for life.
| Phase | Duration | Allowed Foods | Daily Protein Target | Key Rules |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phase 1: Clear Liquids | Days 1-7 (post-surgery) | Water, clear broth, sugar-free jelly, diluted sugar-free squash, herbal tea | 20-30 g (via protein water) | Sip slowly (30 ml every 15 mins). No straws. No carbonated drinks. No caffeine. |
| Phase 2: Full Liquids | Weeks 2-3 | Protein shakes, skimmed milk, smooth yoghurt, blended soups (no lumps), custard | 40-60 g | Prioritise protein shakes (whey isolate). No sugar. Separate liquids from food by 30 minutes. |
| Phase 3: Pureed and Soft Foods | Weeks 4-6 | Scrambled eggs, cottage cheese, hummus, mashed fish, pureed chicken, soft beans, avocado | 60-80 g | Food should be the consistency of baby food. Chew thoroughly. Eat slowly (20-30 mins per meal). Stop immediately if you feel full. |
| Phase 4: Regular Foods | Week 7 onwards | Lean protein (chicken, fish, turkey, eggs), cooked vegetables, small portions of complex carbohydrates, healthy fats | 60-80 g | Protein first at every meal. Eat three small meals and two protein-rich snacks daily. Avoid bread, pasta, rice in large quantities. No sugary drinks ever. |
After sleeve gastrectomy, you will need to take the following supplements indefinitely:
Your MedProper dietitian will provide a complete supplement schedule tailored to your blood test results at 3, 6, and 12 months post-surgery.
Weight loss after bariatric surgery is measured as a percentage of Excess Weight Loss (EWL). Excess weight is the difference between your current weight and your ideal weight (typically calculated as BMI 25). Here is what published clinical data shows for each procedure.
| Timeframe | Gastric Balloon | Gastric Sleeve | Mini Gastric Bypass | Gastric Bypass (Roux-en-Y) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6 months | 8-12% total body weight | 40-50% EWL | 45-55% EWL | 50-60% EWL |
| 12 months | 10-15% total body weight | 60-70% EWL | 65-75% EWL | 65-75% EWL |
| 3 years | N/A (balloon removed) | 55-65% EWL | 60-70% EWL | 60-72% EWL |
| 5 years | N/A | 50-60% EWL | 55-65% EWL | 55-70% EWL |
| 10 years | N/A | 51-54% EWL | Data emerging | 52-60% EWL |
For a patient weighing 130 kg with an ideal weight of 75 kg (excess weight = 55 kg):
Individual results vary based on adherence to the post-operative diet, exercise habits, pre-existing metabolic conditions, and genetics. Patients who engage fully with the 12-month aftercare programme consistently achieve results at the upper end of these ranges.
This is one of the most important and underappreciated benefits of bariatric surgery. The evidence for metabolic improvement following weight loss surgery is now so strong that the procedure is increasingly referred to as "metabolic surgery" rather than simply "weight loss surgery."
The metabolic effects of bariatric surgery go far beyond calorie restriction. Within days of the operation, before significant weight loss has occurred, patients experience:
The strongest predictors of diabetes remission after bariatric surgery are:
If you have Type 2 diabetes with a BMI of 30 or above, bariatric surgery is now considered a first-line treatment option by every major international diabetes organisation. At MedProper, our bariatric team works closely with endocrinologists to assess metabolic candidacy and optimise outcomes.
The arrival of semaglutide (sold as Ozempic for diabetes and Wegovy for weight management) has transformed the conversation around obesity treatment. Both surgery and GLP-1 medications are effective, but they work differently, cost differently, and produce different long-term outcomes.
| Factor | Gastric Sleeve Surgery | Semaglutide (Wegovy) |
|---|---|---|
| Mechanism | Permanent stomach reduction (75-80%) + ghrelin suppression | Weekly injection mimicking GLP-1 hormone to reduce appetite |
| Average weight loss | 25-30% of total body weight at 12 months | 15-17% of total body weight at 68 weeks |
| Excess weight loss | 60-70% EWL at 12 months | 40-50% EWL at 68 weeks |
| Treatment duration | One-off procedure | Lifelong (weight regain occurs when medication is stopped) |
| Annual cost (UK) | £1,868 one-off (MedProper) or £8,000-£13,000 (UK private) | £2,400-£3,000/year (private prescription UK) |
| 5-year cost | £1,868 (MedProper) | £12,000-£15,000 |
| 10-year cost | £1,868 (MedProper) | £24,000-£30,000 |
| NHS availability | Yes (22-34 month wait, BMI 40+) | Limited (specialist centres only, criteria vary by CCG) |
| Type 2 diabetes remission | 50-70% (sleeve), 60-80% (bypass) | 15-20% remission, significant HbA1c improvement |
| Weight regain after stopping | 15-20% regain some weight over 5-10 years | 66% of lost weight regained within 12 months of stopping |
| Surgical risk | Yes (mortality <0.1%, major complications <1%) | No surgical risk |
| Common side effects | Nausea (weeks 1-4), acid reflux, nutritional deficiencies | Nausea (30-40%), vomiting, diarrhoea, constipation, gallstones |
| Contraindications | Prior gastric surgery, pregnancy, active substance abuse | Personal or family history of medullary thyroid carcinoma, MEN2, pregnancy |
Semaglutide is an excellent option for patients with moderate obesity (BMI 27-35) who are not surgical candidates or who prefer a non-surgical approach. However, for patients with a BMI above 35, the evidence consistently shows that bariatric surgery delivers greater, more durable weight loss and higher rates of diabetes remission.
The critical financial consideration: Wegovy costs approximately £2,400-£3,000 per year on a UK private prescription. Over ten years, that represents £24,000-£30,000 for ongoing medication that must be taken indefinitely, with evidence showing that most patients regain the majority of lost weight if the medication is discontinued. A gastric sleeve at MedProper is a one-time investment of £1,868 that produces permanent anatomical change and sustained long-term results.
For patients currently taking Ozempic or Wegovy who have plateaued or wish to transition to a permanent solution, gastric sleeve surgery can be an appropriate next step. Our bariatric team has experience managing patients transitioning from GLP-1 medications to surgery and will advise on the optimal timing for medication cessation before your procedure.
Most competitor websites quote 12-month weight loss figures. What happens after that? Long-term data is essential for making an informed decision, and the evidence at 10 years and beyond is genuinely encouraging.
A comprehensive 2023 systematic review and meta-analysis published in Obesity Surgery, analysing outcomes from over 8,000 patients followed for 10 or more years after sleeve gastrectomy, reported the following:
The Look AHEAD trial, the largest long-term randomised study of intensive lifestyle intervention for obesity, found that patients who received counselling, diet, and exercise support regained nearly all lost weight by 8 years. The average sustained weight loss through lifestyle intervention alone was just 2-5% of body weight at 10 years.
By contrast, bariatric surgery patients maintain 15-25% total body weight loss at 10 years, representing a sustained benefit that no medication or lifestyle programme has been able to match in published trials.
This is the question that brings nearly 400 UK searchers to Google every month with the specific query "gastric sleeve turkey death rate." It deserves a direct, transparent, and evidence-based answer.
The overall mortality rate for laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy is less than 0.1% (approximately 1 in 1,000 to 1 in 3,000 procedures), according to meta-analyses published in the Annals of Surgery and Obesity Surgery. This is comparable to the mortality rate for laparoscopic cholecystectomy (gallbladder removal), one of the most commonly performed operations in the world.
To put this in perspective:
| Procedure | Mortality Rate |
|---|---|
| Laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy | 0.03-0.1% |
| Laparoscopic gastric bypass | 0.1-0.3% |
| NHS bariatric surgery (all types, UK audit data) | 0.07% |
| Laparoscopic cholecystectomy (gallbladder) | 0.1-0.5% |
| Hip replacement | 0.2-0.4% |
| Caesarean section | 0.01-0.02% |
| Untreated severe obesity (annual mortality risk) | 1-3% per year |
The key figure in that table is the last one. The annual mortality risk of remaining severely obese, with a BMI above 40, is 1-3% per year from cardiovascular disease, diabetes complications, and obesity-related cancers. The one-time surgical risk of 0.03-0.1% must be weighed against decades of cumulative annual risk from untreated obesity.
Major complication rates (staple line leak, haemorrhage requiring intervention, pulmonary embolism) occur in fewer than 1% of sleeve gastrectomy cases at accredited centres.
Minor complication rates (nausea, dehydration, wound infection, temporary hair loss) are more common, affecting 5-15% of patients, but these are manageable and typically resolve within weeks to months.
MedProper operates within a hospital that holds Joint Commission International (JCI) accreditation, the gold standard for international healthcare quality and patient safety. JCI accreditation requires:
Fewer than 5% of hospitals worldwide hold JCI accreditation. When you choose a JCI-accredited facility, you are choosing a hospital that has been independently verified to meet the same safety standards as leading institutions in the United States, Europe, and the United Kingdom.
Bariatric surgery at MedProper is performed by surgeons who are:
Whether you choose MedProper or another provider, these are the non-negotiable criteria you should verify before committing to bariatric surgery abroad:
Green flags (essential):
Red flags (walk away):
This is arguably the most important section of this entire page, and it addresses a concern that no other Turkish bariatric clinic adequately covers: what happens when you return to the UK and need ongoing medical support.
The Medical Protection Society (MPS) and the British Medical Association (BMA) have both published guidance confirming that UK GPs have no legal obligation to provide routine aftercare for elective procedures performed abroad. In practice, this means:
This uncertainty is a genuine concern, and it is one of the reasons we have developed a comprehensive UK aftercare system that does not depend on your GP willingness to help.
1. Printable GP aftercare protocol
Before you leave Istanbul, we provide a professionally formatted, NHS-style document that you can give to your GP. This includes:
This document is designed to make it as easy as possible for your GP to support you, even if they have limited experience with bariatric aftercare.
2. Remote nutritionist access
Your 12-month aftercare programme includes five scheduled video consultations with a qualified nutritionist at the following intervals:
Between scheduled consultations, you have WhatsApp access to our nutritional support team for any questions about food, supplements, or concerns.
3. Blood test protocol
We recommend the following blood tests at 3, 6, and 12 months post-surgery, then annually:
| Test | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| Full blood count (FBC) | Detects anaemia (common after bariatric surgery) |
| Ferritin and iron studies | Iron deficiency is the most common nutritional deficiency post-sleeve |
| Vitamin B12 | Reduced absorption; deficiency causes fatigue and neurological symptoms |
| Folate | Important for cell production; deficiency common post-surgery |
| Vitamin D (25-OH) | UK patients are frequently deficient even before surgery |
| Calcium (adjusted) | Bone health monitoring |
| HbA1c | Monitors diabetes status and glucose control |
| Liver function tests (LFTs) | Monitors fatty liver disease improvement |
| Renal function (U and Es) | Hydration and kidney function |
| Thyroid function (TSH) | Thyroid abnormalities can affect weight loss |
| Zinc and copper | Trace mineral deficiencies can cause hair loss and immune dysfunction |
| Albumin and total protein | Monitors protein nutrition status |
If your GP is unable to arrange these tests, you can obtain them privately through services such as Medichecks or Thriva for approximately £80-£120 per panel, and send the results to our team for interpretation.
4. Emergency support
If you experience a medical emergency related to your surgery after returning to the UK:
Transparency about complications and contingency planning is essential. Here is exactly what happens in various scenarios.
If a complication occurs while you are still in Istanbul:
If a complication occurs after you return to the UK:
Travel insurance:
We strongly recommend purchasing travel insurance that includes medical coverage before travelling to Istanbul. Standard holiday insurance typically excludes elective surgery. Specialist medical travel insurance providers such as Freedom Insurance, Insure and Go (medical travel add-on), or Global Health Insurance offer policies that cover bariatric surgery abroad, typically costing £50-£150 for a 10-day trip.
After significant weight loss following bariatric surgery, many patients are left with excess, loose skin that can cause physical discomfort, hygiene issues, and psychological distress. Body contouring surgery can address these concerns and is one of the most commonly requested follow-up procedures.
When to consider body contouring: 12-18 months after your bariatric surgery, once your weight has stabilised for at least 3-6 months.
Common body contouring procedures after bariatric surgery:
| Procedure | What It Addresses | Typical Timing |
|---|---|---|
| Abdominoplasty (tummy tuck) | Excess abdominal skin and weakened muscles | 12-18 months post-bariatric |
| Arm lift (brachioplasty) | Loose skin on upper arms ("bat wings") | 12-18 months post-bariatric |
| Thigh lift | Excess skin on inner and outer thighs | 12-18 months post-bariatric |
| Breast lift or reduction | Deflated, sagging breasts after weight loss | 12-18 months post-bariatric |
| Lower body lift (belt lipectomy) | Circumferential excess skin around waist and hips | 18-24 months post-bariatric |
MedProper performs all of these body contouring procedures. Many bariatric patients return to Istanbul for body contouring surgery as a second trip. Our team can plan your body contouring options during your 12-month post-bariatric review.
All surgery carries risk. Bariatric surgery is safe, but it is major abdominal surgery performed under general anaesthesia, and you should understand the potential complications before making your decision.
Real patient results provide the most compelling evidence of what bariatric surgery can achieve. MedProper maintains a growing gallery of before-and-after photographs from patients who have kindly consented to share their transformation journeys.
Our bariatric before-and-after gallery shows outcomes at 6 months, 12 months, and 24 months post-surgery, allowing you to see the progressive nature of weight loss after sleeve gastrectomy and gastric bypass.
All photographs are taken with full patient consent under GDPR-compliant protocols. No images are digitally altered.
To view our latest bariatric patient results or to speak with previous patients who are happy to share their experience, please contact our patient coordination team.
Yes, when performed at a JCI-accredited hospital by experienced bariatric surgeons. Turkey is one of the top five countries in the world for bariatric surgery volume, which means Turkish bariatric surgeons typically have significantly higher annual case volumes than their UK counterparts. Higher volume is consistently associated with better outcomes in published surgical research. MedProper operates in a JCI-accredited hospital with surgeons who have performed over 2,000 bariatric procedures.
At MedProper, the minimum BMI for sleeve gastrectomy is 35, or 30 with obesity-related comorbidities such as Type 2 diabetes, hypertension, or sleep apnoea. This is lower than the typical NHS requirement of BMI 40 (or 35 with comorbidities). For patients with a BMI of 27-35, a gastric balloon may be a more appropriate option.
The standard stay is 7 days: 1 day for pre-operative testing, 1 day for surgery, 2-3 days in hospital for recovery and leak testing, and 2-3 days at the hotel for further recovery and dietitian consultation before flying home.
The post-operative diet follows four phases: clear liquids only for the first week, full liquids (including protein shakes) for weeks 2-3, pureed and soft foods for weeks 4-6, and regular foods from week 7 onwards. Protein intake should reach 60-80 grams daily by week 4. The "30/30 rule" applies: no drinking 30 minutes before or after meals.
You will need to take a bariatric multivitamin, vitamin B12, iron with vitamin C, calcium citrate with vitamin D3, and additional vitamin D3 supplements indefinitely. These are non-negotiable. Nutritional deficiencies after bariatric surgery are preventable with consistent supplementation but can cause serious health problems if neglected.
The average excess weight loss after sleeve gastrectomy is 60-70% at 12 months. For a patient weighing 130 kg with an ideal weight of 75 kg (55 kg excess weight), this means losing approximately 33-38.5 kg in the first year. At 10 years, studies show 51-54% excess weight loss is maintained on average.
Gastric sleeve surgery achieves complete Type 2 diabetes remission in 50-70% of patients within 12 months. Gastric bypass achieves remission in 60-80%. The metabolic effects occur within days of surgery, before significant weight loss, due to hormonal changes involving GLP-1 and other gut hormones. Patients with diabetes duration under 10 years and no insulin dependence have the highest remission rates.
Gastric sleeve produces greater weight loss (25-30% total body weight vs 15-17% for semaglutide), is a one-time procedure rather than a lifelong medication, and costs less over 5-10 years. Semaglutide (Wegovy) costs approximately £2,400-£3,000 per year in the UK and most patients regain weight if they stop the medication. Gastric sleeve at MedProper costs £1,868 as a one-off investment with permanent anatomical change.
Published research shows that 51-54% excess weight loss is maintained at 10 years after sleeve gastrectomy, with 61.5% of patients maintaining more than 50% excess weight loss. Additionally, 95.2% of patients report good or excellent food tolerance at 10 years. Type 2 diabetes remission is maintained in 45-55% of patients at the decade mark.
Gastric sleeve removes 75-80% of the stomach without altering the intestines. Gastric bypass creates a small stomach pouch and reroutes the intestines, combining restriction with malabsorption. Bypass produces slightly higher average weight loss and better diabetes remission rates, but requires lifelong vitamin supplementation and carries a slightly higher complication rate. Sleeve is simpler, faster, and has a lower nutritional deficiency risk.
A gastric balloon is a non-surgical option where a silicone balloon is placed in the stomach endoscopically (no incisions) to reduce stomach capacity and create early satiety. It is best suited for patients with a BMI of 27-35, produces 10-15% total body weight loss over 6-12 months, and is fully reversible. At MedProper, gastric balloon treatment starts from £990.
NHS waiting times for bariatric surgery currently range from 22-34 months on average, depending on your region. The longest waits are in Yorkshire (30 months average, up to 45 months worst case) and London (28 months average, up to 42 months worst case). These figures do not include the time spent in Tier 3 weight management programmes before surgical referral, which can add 6-24 months.
This varies. Some GPs willingly provide blood tests and monitoring, while others may decline. MedProper addresses this by providing a printable GP aftercare protocol that explains exactly which tests are needed and when. Our 12-month remote follow-up programme includes five video consultations with a nutritionist, and you can obtain private blood tests through services like Medichecks if your GP is unable to help.
If a complication occurs while you are still in Istanbul, all treatment is covered by MedProper at no extra cost. After returning to the UK, our 24/7 clinical support line connects you with your bariatric surgeon via video consultation. If in-person treatment is needed, we coordinate with your local hospital or arrange your return to Istanbul with treatment costs covered for surgery-related complications. For emergencies, always attend A&E first.
Yes. Our all-inclusive package includes companion accommodation at the hotel (shared room with the patient). Your companion can accompany you to hospital appointments, stay with you during your hospital recovery in your private room, and provide support throughout your stay. Many patients find having a trusted companion significantly reduces anxiety.
Standard UK health insurance policies (BUPA, AXA, Aviva) do not typically cover elective bariatric surgery abroad. However, you should contact your insurer to check your specific policy. Specialist medical travel insurance is available and strongly recommended; it covers medical complications during your trip and typically costs £50-£150.
Most patients can fly comfortably 5-7 days after laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy. We recommend wearing compression stockings during the flight and continuing blood-thinning injections as prescribed. Drink water frequently during the flight to stay hydrated. If your flight is longer than 4 hours, walk around the cabin periodically.
Most patients return to desk-based or sedentary work 10-14 days after surgery. If your job involves physical labour, heavy lifting, or extended standing, allow 4-6 weeks. Listen to your body and return to full activity gradually.
Yes. MedProper performs revisional bariatric surgery from £3,000. Common revisions include sleeve-to-bypass conversion (for weight regain or chronic reflux), re-sleeve gastrectomy (for an insufficiently narrow or dilated sleeve), and band removal with conversion to sleeve or bypass. A thorough endoscopic and radiological assessment determines the best approach for each patient.
Walking should begin within 12 hours of surgery and continue daily throughout recovery. Light exercise (swimming, cycling, yoga) can resume at 4 weeks. Moderate exercise (gym, running, resistance training) can resume at 6-8 weeks. Full exercise without restrictions is typically possible from 12 weeks. Exercise is essential for maintaining long-term weight loss.
Loose skin is common after significant weight loss, particularly in patients who lose 40 kg or more. The degree of loose skin depends on your age, genetics, how much weight you lose, and how quickly you lose it. Body contouring procedures (tummy tuck, arm lift, thigh lift, breast lift) can address excess skin and are recommended 12-18 months after weight stabilisation. MedProper performs all major body contouring procedures.
You should avoid alcohol completely for at least 6 months after surgery. After that, be aware that alcohol affects you more quickly and intensely after sleeve gastrectomy because it is absorbed faster and your tolerance is dramatically reduced. One glass of wine may have the effect of two or three. There is also a documented increase in alcohol dependency following bariatric surgery, so mindful consumption is essential.
It is recommended to wait at least 12-18 months after bariatric surgery before becoming pregnant. This allows your weight to stabilise and your nutritional status to normalise. Bariatric surgery actually improves fertility in many women by resolving polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), normalising menstrual cycles, and improving hormonal balance. When you do become pregnant, close nutritional monitoring is important.
Contact our patient coordination team to discuss payment options. At £1,868, our gastric sleeve pricing is already substantially lower than UK financing plans, which typically start at £110-£150 per month for UK private surgery (representing £8,000-£13,000 total over 4-7 years of repayment).
Lower operating costs, staff salaries, and hospital overheads in Turkey, combined with a favourable exchange rate (Turkish lira to British pound), government investment in medical tourism infrastructure, and high surgical volumes that create economies of scale. The surgical equipment, techniques, and safety standards are identical to those used in UK hospitals.
An all-inclusive bariatric package bundles the surgery, hospital stay, hotel accommodation, airport transfers, pre-operative testing, post-operative medications, and follow-up care into a single price. At MedProper, our £1,868 sleeve gastrectomy package includes all of these elements plus companion accommodation, a 3-month diet plan, and 12-month remote nutritional support. The only additional costs are your flights and travel insurance.
A mini gastric bypass (one-anastomosis gastric bypass) creates a long, tubular stomach pouch connected to a single loop of small intestine. A full Roux-en-Y gastric bypass creates a smaller pouch with two intestinal connections. The mini bypass is technically simpler, faster to perform, and produces similar weight loss results. It may carry a slightly higher risk of bile reflux. At MedProper, mini gastric bypass starts from £2,200 (EUR2,574).
Most negative reviews relate to poor aftercare, communication difficulties, unexpected additional charges, or choosing clinics without proper accreditation. These issues are avoidable by selecting a JCI-accredited hospital with a named surgeon, transparent all-inclusive pricing, and a structured follow-up programme. MedProper provides a dedicated English-speaking coordinator, 12-month remote aftercare, and no hidden fees.
Verify the following: JCI or ISO accreditation of the hospital; IFSO membership of the surgeon; specific bariatric surgery case volume (minimum 500 lifetime procedures); willingness to share complication data; structured follow-up programme of at least 12 months; transparent, all-inclusive pricing; clear emergency protocols. Avoid clinics that cannot provide a named surgeon, do not have hospital accreditation, or quote prices significantly below £1,500 for a sleeve gastrectomy.