Demi Agoglia, 26, travelled to Turkey for a Brazilian butt lift operation but fell ill immediately after the cosmetic surgery and died four days later in hospital, an inquest heard

A popular mum died after having a Brazilian buff lift operation in Turkey when she received “woeful” aftercare, an inquest heard.

The family of Demi Agoglia, 26, told her she did not need the op as she was a “good looking girl”, but she was insistent and flew abroad on January 4 with her partner, Bradley Jones. Tragically, she died in a hospital in Istanbul four days later after undergoing the operation.

Bolton Coroner’s Court heard Ms Agoglia had struggled with her mental health and was on medication for ADHD and bipolar disorder. Her mother, Christine Tydd, told the hearing she told her daughter she was a “good looking girl” and did not need the operation. She said: “She was conscious about the way she looked. There was no changing her mind.”

Landscaper Mr Jones said he also did not want Ms Agoglia to have the surgery, but she had booked the trip months earlier through a company named Comfort Zone Surgery after “she had seen some celebrity” advertising the procedure. The couple stayed in a shared villa in Istanbul before they were taken by taxi to hospital.

Following the operation Ms Agoglia was “shaking” and appeared “very, very cold”, said Mr Jones. Staff from Comfort Zone were called to the villa after Ms Agoglia complained of a tight chest and they checked her blood pressure but did not inspect the area of the operation or check her heart rate and pulse, the inquest heard.

Ms Agoglia collapsed at the villa the following day and was taken back to Avrasya Hospital where she died. The surgeon who conducted the operation later told Mr Jones they had done everything they could. It later emerged that the Comfort Zone staff who were called out to the villa were not qualified nurses.

Giving expert evidence, Harley Street consultant plastic surgeon Dr Omar Tillo noted the “completely bizarre” actions of the Comfort Zone staff who tried to feed pieces of cucumber to Ms Agoglia after she collapsed. He said: “The lack of proper care and response, particularly the failure to address post-operative complications, are likely to have played a significant role in Demi’s tragic outcome.”

Pathologist Dr Usha Chandran carried out a post-mortem examination on January 25 and ruled the cause of death was “unascertained” because she found no evidence of microscopic fat embolism. Dr Chandran told the hearing: “I’m really disturbed by Demi’s death and I feel all these cosmetic procedures are given a lot of importance by celebrities… and are being done in shoddy clinics.”

Mr Pollard said: “Most inquests are sad by their very nature. This inquest is especially so as it involved the death of a young woman with considerable mental health issues who, despite the fact she was pretty and her partner did not think she needed any improvement, insisted on having a BBL surgery.

“I found she went to Turkey presumably because the process was quicker and cheaper than the UK. “We know little or nothing of the perioperative situation because the Turkish authorities refused to co-operate with the coronial process.

“I do find the post-operative care varied from woeful to completely non-existent. When she showed obvious symptoms of serious illness it was not immediately recognised by her partner, understandably, or the unqualified members of staff.

“By the time she got to the hospital it was frankly too late and she was in an irrecoverable state. I think it was indicative of the poor level of care that at all times she was transported not in an ambulance but in a taxi, it was always the same taxi.

“I heard extremely helpful evidence from Dr Tillo who clearly spelt out all the failures and failings he was able to assess from the evidence and the sparse documentation available to him.”

Concluding Ms Agoglia died as a result of misadventure contributed to by neglect, he said: “I find there was no proper informed consent in this matter, there was no proper pre-operative care and advice, and no proper post-operative care. All of this meant the care in total fell well below the standard expected of this type of treatment and the lack of care contributed significantly to Demi’s death.”

Mr Pollard told Ms Agoglia’s family he would write to Health Secretary Wes Streeting, adding: “I do feel something further needs to be done to stop this frankly barbaric medical practice being conducted to such low standards that would certainly not be tolerated in the UK.”

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