SURGERY HELL

I spent £10k savings on surgery to go from size 14 to 4 but really regret it, I look like a saggy skin-covered skeleton

LOOKING at herself in the mirror, Leah Lazarus recoils at the scars, loose skin and stretch marks on her body.

At 39, she wears clothes for 12-year-olds following complications with gastric sleeve surgery, which she thought would give her the size ten figure she had always wanted.

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Looking at herself in the mirror, Leah Lazarus recoils at the scars, loose skin and stretch marks on her body.Credit: Supplied
At 5ft 2in, with a BMI of 33 and a size 14 at her heaviest mum-of-two Leah was not eligible for the operation on the NHSCredit: SWNS/Leah Lazarus
Leah says: 'I’ve been left with saggy, loose skin on my stomach and I have to use clear silicone tape to keep it in the right place so I can wear jeans.'Credit: David Cummings

At 5ft 2in, with a BMI of 33 and a size 14 at her heaviest — the UK average is 16 — mum-of-two Leah was not eligible for the operation on the NHS.

So she turned to a private clinic in the Midlands, spending her entire £10,000 life savings on the procedure.

She has since spent her kids’ nest eggs on trying to correct the problems.

After the surgery, in which she suffered a suspected leak in her stomach, she lost almost five stone, going from 12st 12lb to 7st 7lb and a size 4.

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She says: “Having surgery to lose a couple of dress sizes is the worst decision I ever made.

“I only wanted to get down to a size ten, between nine and ten stone, to look better in smart clothes and bikinis.

“Now, I dress in children’s clothing, mainly pyjamas, and I eat like a toddler — scrambled eggs or a few bites of fish and a forkful or two of rice.

‘I felt guilty and selfish for having the surgery’

“I’ve been left with saggy, loose skin on my stomach and I have to use clear silicone tape to keep it in the right place so I can wear jeans.

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“If I don’t, the skin bulges under the zip.

“I’m skeletal and hollow. I hate it.”

Leah lives with fiancé Antony Beacon, 39, a carer, and their children Savannah, 17, and Kingston, 15.

She is one of many “normal-sized” women who pay huge sums to go under the knife to shift weight that they believe will not budge through a healthy diet and exercise.

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According to the British Obesity and Metabolic Surgery Society, up to 7,000 people in the UK have bariatric surgery — which includes gastric sleeve and other weight-loss operations — every year.

Procedures are available on the NHS, but with waiting times of up to 18 months and strict criteria — patients must have a BMI of around 40 or above — desperate people like Leah are stumping up between £8,000 and £15,000 for private ops, often abroad.

At least seven Brits have lost their lives following operations in Turkey.

GP and aesthetic doctor Grace Hula, founder of , believes there are many reasons why women are going to extreme lengths for their dream bodies.

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She says: “Societal beauty standards, personal factors like self-esteem, peer pressure and a desire for emotional wellbeing, as well as cosmetic surgery trends, are some factors.

“Many women opt for surgery, whether locally or abroad, to achieve their ‘dream’ body, even without obesity as a concern.

“Weight-loss surgery can offer significant benefits to those with a BMI above 40 and significant obesity-related health issues.

“Individuals with a ‘normal’ BMI should approach surgery cautiously and explore alternative weight control methods exhaustively.

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“Surgery frequently involves potential complications like infection, bleeding, blood clots, anaesthesia-related problems, organ damage and scarring.

“Despite surgeons’ best efforts, nearby organs may occasionally be unintentionally harmed.”

Celebrities who have gone down the surgery route to shed weight have had mixed results.

Vanessa Feltz, 61, has spoken about how she regretted having a gastric band fitted after it embedded in her liver and caused a hernia, while Kelly Osbourne, 38, said she was proud of her decision to have gastric sleeve surgery for her self-described “little dumpling body”.

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