British Man Dies by Suicide After Traveling to Turkey for Dental Care
A devastating case highlights the clinical, ethical, and emotional risks of dental tourism, and why oral health professionals must lead the conversation.
Dental tourism continues to rise, driven by cost savings and the promise of rapid smile transformations, but at what cost? A recent tragedy underscores the profound risks when treatment planning, continuity of care, and patient support break down.
A 48-year-old British father traveled abroad seeking treatment for periodontal disease. The plan was straightforward: full extraction followed by temporary dentures and eventual implant placement. Instead, after removing all of his teeth, the clinic halted treatment and sent him home edentulous, without prosthetics, and with instructions to return 6 months later.
The physical consequences were immediate: difficulty eating, weight concerns, and functional impairment. But the emotional toll proved far more devastating. The sudden loss of dentition deeply impacted his self-image, confidence, and mental health. Despite family support and contact with healthcare services, gaps in follow-up care and missed intervention opportunities compounded his decline. Within months, he died by suicide.
This is a stark reminder that dentistry is never purely mechanical. Tooth loss, especially abrupt, full-arch edentulism, can carry significant psychological consequences. Treatment planning must extend beyond clinical outcomes to include patient preparedness, temporization, and continuity of care.
As patients increasingly inquire about overseas treatment, clinicians are uniquely positioned to educate, guide, and advocate. Cost should never eclipse comprehensive care, informed consent, and patient safety. Click here to read more.