The Japan Times - 'What have they done?' Flip side of Turkey's dental boom

EUR -
AED 3.838524
AFN 78.306837
ALL 98.671743
AMD 418.568849
ANG 1.881052
AOA 955.707946
ARS 1094.170111
AUD 1.654384
AWG 1.881104
AZN 1.778389
BAM 1.965803
BBD 2.107372
BDT 127.28321
BGN 1.962311
BHD 0.393835
BIF 3088.500349
BMD 1.045058
BND 1.416131
BOB 7.212553
BRL 6.191342
BSD 1.043703
BTN 90.1749
BWP 14.486653
BYN 3.415738
BYR 20483.130157
BZD 2.096536
CAD 1.49727
CDF 2974.23363
CHF 0.94607
CLF 0.037402
CLP 1032.046371
CNY 7.577811
CNH 7.584046
COP 4416.685391
CRC 526.722545
CUC 1.045058
CUP 27.694028
CVE 110.626784
CZK 25.096744
DJF 185.866061
DKK 7.461148
DOP 64.049462
DZD 140.757627
EGP 52.564419
ERN 15.675865
ETB 133.462062
FJD 2.44183
FKP 0.860696
GBP 0.842975
GEL 2.994081
GGP 0.860696
GHS 15.812637
GIP 0.860696
GMD 75.244222
GNF 9025.516223
GTQ 8.06638
GYD 218.36307
HKD 8.137942
HNL 26.572902
HRK 7.712053
HTG 136.40609
HUF 409.914471
IDR 16910.287025
ILS 3.740159
IMP 0.860696
INR 90.174734
IQD 1367.245148
IRR 43983.864012
ISK 145.891906
JEP 0.860696
JMD 164.086614
JOD 0.741467
JPY 162.928677
KES 135.167517
KGS 91.388512
KHR 4202.744271
KMF 493.686139
KPW 940.552011
KRW 1494.667571
KWD 0.322003
KYD 0.869828
KZT 543.436806
LAK 22756.202053
LBP 93466.971469
LKR 311.65623
LRD 206.665861
LSL 19.373773
LTL 3.085784
LVL 0.632145
LYD 5.13675
MAD 10.43638
MDL 19.465472
MGA 4893.001625
MKD 61.556067
MMK 3394.306518
MNT 3551.106044
MOP 8.374226
MRU 41.573356
MUR 48.553199
MVR 16.091201
MWK 1809.918994
MXN 21.21524
MYR 4.61968
MZN 66.778242
NAD 19.373587
NGN 1626.120421
NIO 38.405598
NOK 11.756162
NPR 144.27984
NZD 1.831714
OMR 0.402268
PAB 1.043708
PEN 3.88162
PGK 4.189742
PHP 61.035021
PKR 290.916704
PLN 4.21425
PYG 8252.910594
QAR 3.804843
RON 4.975417
RSD 117.116434
RUB 104.371678
RWF 1448.838148
SAR 3.919792
SBD 8.82713
SCR 14.910103
SDG 628.080029
SEK 11.45529
SGD 1.410687
SHP 0.860696
SLE 23.736479
SLL 21914.33654
SOS 596.550906
SRD 36.686747
STD 21630.583621
SVC 9.132692
SYP 13587.839694
SZL 19.381383
THB 35.332878
TJS 11.42386
TMT 3.657702
TND 3.332398
TOP 2.447633
TRY 37.303961
TTD 7.095067
TWD 34.08612
TZS 2629.364885
UAH 43.837061
UGX 3846.561038
USD 1.045058
UYU 45.679386
UZS 13547.173808
VES 58.745903
VND 26204.820851
VUV 124.071344
WST 2.927026
XAF 658.10922
XAG 0.033928
XAU 0.000376
XCD 2.824321
XDR 0.80423
XOF 658.102902
XPF 119.331742
YER 260.320564
ZAR 19.249607
ZMK 9406.772035
ZMW 29.041697
ZWL 336.50814
  • RBGPF

    61.2800

    61.28

    +100%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    11.6

    +0.17%

  • BCC

    0.5300

    128.45

    +0.41%

  • CMSC

    -0.0050

    23.485

    -0.02%

  • NGG

    0.6600

    60.71

    +1.09%

  • CMSD

    -0.0900

    23.87

    -0.38%

  • RIO

    0.4400

    61.56

    +0.71%

  • BTI

    0.4800

    37.05

    +1.3%

  • GSK

    0.6200

    34.05

    +1.82%

  • BCE

    0.0700

    23.22

    +0.3%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    12.55

    +0.16%

  • BP

    0.3600

    31.49

    +1.14%

  • RYCEF

    0.2800

    7.55

    +3.71%

  • VOD

    0.0200

    8.4

    +0.24%

  • RELX

    0.1300

    49.39

    +0.26%

  • AZN

    0.4000

    68.6

    +0.58%

'What have they done?' Flip side of Turkey's dental boom
'What have they done?' Flip side of Turkey's dental boom / Photo: Ozan KOSE - AFP

'What have they done?' Flip side of Turkey's dental boom

Briton Rida Azeem knew her dental trip to Turkey had gone badly wrong the second she took off her mask.

Text size:

"My husband said, 'What have they done to you? Your face is all sunk.'"

"I had big gaps underneath my gums and you could see all the metal bits (of the implants). It was done so badly it was unbelievable," the engineer from Manchester told AFP.

"Originally they were going to do five implants," said Azeem. But when the treatment was about to start, the dentists told her they would "have to remove all your teeth".

"They looked professional," said the 42-year-old, who now has to wear false teeth.

Attracted by the promise of the perfect smile at an unbeatable price, 150,000 to 250,000 foreign patients flock to Turkey every year, according to the Turkish Dentists' Association (TDB), making it one of the world's main dental tourism destinations alongside Hungary, Thailand and Dubai.

But the "Hollywood smile" sold by clinics in Istanbul, Izmir or Antalya often involves trimming -- or even extracting -- healthy teeth, sometimes taking all of them out.

"Many dental clinics in Turkey treat teeth that don't need treatment," the head of an Istanbul clinic, who did not want to be named, told AFP.

"They put veneers on teeth that only need bleaching or lightening, sometimes they even put full crowns."

- 'Pain every day' -

Azeem is far from the only foreign patient to have been left disfigured or in chronic pain.

Alana Boone, a 23-year-old Belgian woman who travelled to Antalya in July 2021, was one of the five foreigners AFP talked to who suffered serious complications.

The 28 crowns she had done seemed fine, but only on the surface. They were "placed too deep. Now I have inflammation and pain every day... at times it is very intense," she said.

"The only solution would be to remove everything but dentists do not know what they are going to find."

Marie, a French nurse, felt she needed work on her lower teeth to boost her confidence after going through a separation. "I wanted to look more attractive," she said.

But a Turkish dentist persuaded her to put crowns on her top ones too -- 28 in total.

"I had very healthy teeth. I began to regret it all when they began to file my teeth," she said.

"After about a month, the problems started: teeth began to move, and food began to get stuck between them... My breath is so awful that even mouthwash" doesn't help, said the fortysomething.

- 'It's mutilation' -

The British Dental Association has sounded the alarm about the phenomenon, warning of the "considerable risks... of cut-price treatment" abroad, warning of many cases of infections and "ill-fitting crowns and implants that fell out".

Patrick Solera, of the French dentists' union, said he was horrified to see influencers going to Turkey "to have their teeth trimmed".

"You do not put a crown on a tooth that's a little yellow, and trimming a healthy tooth to put a crown amounts to mutilation. In France they lock you up for that."

But Tarik Ismen, of the TBD, insisted that Turkish dentists were only responding to a need. "Some people want to look like Hollywood stars and have a bright, fluorescent smile. If Turkish dentists are not going to do it for them, there are Albanian or Polish ones who will do it," he told AFP.

He said that botched surgery rates of "three to five percent is acceptable... and could happen anywhere", adding that not one of his association's 40,000 dentists had been struck off.

"Turkish dentists are the best and the cheapest in the world," declared Turker Sandalli, who pioneered dental tourism in Turkey 20 years ago.

He boasted that "not one tooth has been extracted in 12 years" in his Istanbul clinic, where 99 percent of the clientele are foreigners.

"But -- and I am sad to tell you this -- 90 percent of Turkish clinics go for cheap dentistry," he said, accusing "2,000 to 3,000" illegal operators of blackening the industry.

Berna Aytac, head of the Istanbul Chamber of Dentists, accused medical tourism agencies of "dragging down the quality of care".

Almost all foreign clients that AFP talked to travelled to Turkey with all-inclusive deals booked through agencies that took in their transport, treatment and accommodation.

– Influencer victim –

More than 450 medical tourism agencies are licensed by the Turkish health ministry, but AFP discovered that some use misleading material to attract customers.

Among them is Sule Dental which presents itself as having its own "dental clinic" even though it is officially only an intermediary.

Sule Dental uses photos and glowing endorsements from former clients with beaming smiles on its internet homepage. One woman calls the staff "AWESOME!!!!", while another praises its "very caring" doctors.

But the pictures are stock photos taken from an image bank. AFP found the same photos being used to publicise a clinic in Antalya called Perla Dental as well as a Tunisian medical agency.

On Instagram, where Sule Dental has 390,000 followers, glowing videos from former patients include two from Britons who told AFP that they had suffered complications.

One was left with "root canal damage. I started to bleed a lot when I was brushing my teeth," he said.

The influencer -- who did not want to be named, and who travelled to Turkey as part of a partnership to publicise the clinic -- has not told his tens of thousands of followers of his problems for fear of being sued.

Neither Sule Dental nor the Turkish health ministry responded to AFP requests for comment.

- 'Too afraid' to go back -

For the victims, legal redress is scant and costly once they return home.

"When a patient returns from Turkey or elsewhere with work already done, dentists refuse to touch them because you become responsible," said the French dentists' leader Solera.

Just to repair the damage, Rida Azeem and Alana Boone have been quoted treatment costing $30,000, three to four times what they paid to have their work done in Turkey.

Through dogged efforts, the British engineer managed to claw back $3,000 from the Istanbul clinic that disfigured her -- not enough even for the dentures she had made in Pakistan to recover "90 percent" of her smile.

The Turkish dentist did offer to treat her if she returned, "but I was too afraid", she said.

The clinic did not reply to AFP requests for comment.

"If you want treatment, find your practitioner yourself, talk to them directly and don't go without an online consultation," said Turkish lawyer Burcu Holmgren from London Legal International.

She said she has helped more than a dozen patients who have had problems with Turkish dental care get redress.

"The process is very slow -- it takes about two years," she said, adding that she has won "96 percent" of her cases.

Most cases end up with a financial settlement, without a dentist being struck off, she admitted.

The head of the Istanbul Chamber of Dentists said she still believes in medical tourism, but is worried by the number of students wanting to get into the profession.

In 2010 Turkey had 35 dental faculties -- now there are 104.

"We are creating future unemployed dentists," said Aytac. "And if they find work, some unfortunately won't be that concerned with ethics."

S.Ogawa--JT