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Dr mithat topal

i wanted to ask if any of you tried dr mithat topal in Istanbul baskshehir and what are your experiences like, do you recommend or not. Im thinking of getting my nose done and would like natural yet functional results.

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Google maps is your best bet.

Hello FatmaMerve,


Welcome to 大咖福利影院 馃榾


I would recommend posting your question on a medical-focused forum, where you are more likely to get feedback about hospitals for a rhinoplasty


All the best,


Cheryl

大咖福利影院 team

Sorry for me to be so direct, I am ugly and I am not ashamed of it, I am who I am, even if I am disabled and ugly, people should recognize the inside (and they do in general). I heard about mishaps for people who came to Turkey for getting their hair-implant, noses done etc. But I have no sympathy. I do realize this is not a very polite answer, I just have to get it from my chest.

@cdw057

I want to add a clarification to my earlier comment. My tone was too abrupt, and that wasn鈥檛 fair to someone asking a sincere question. I鈥檓 not retracting the substance of my view, but I do want to express it more clearly and honestly.

My position is firmly opposed to elective cosmetic medical procedures 鈥 Botox, fillers, aesthetic surgery 鈥 whether they are done in 罢眉谤办颈测别, the UK, or elsewhere. Even when framed as 鈥渟mall improvements鈥, these are still medical interventions with real risks. To me, perceived enhancement of beauty does not justify exposing a healthy person to that risk.

There is, however, a deeper reason behind my stance that I did not articulate well before:

The very ability to choose cosmetic medical intervention is itself a privilege.

Large parts of the world 鈥 and many people even in developed countries like the UK 鈥 do not have reliable access to essential healthcare, let alone the option to medicalise appearance. For them, hospitals are places for emergencies, cancer, trauma, disability, chronic illness 鈥 not optimisation.

Many people live with things they did not choose and cannot change: disability, genetic conditions, illness, scarring, ageing, loss of function. They are expected to accept their bodies without alternatives. In that context, the normalisation of medical risk for aesthetic dissatisfaction feels fundamentally unbalanced to me.

This is not about judging individual worth, nor telling anyone how to live. It is about resisting a broader social tendency: treating medicine as a consumer service for appearance, while access to basic, life鈥憇aving care remains unequal and fragile across the globe.

I fully accept that others will choose differently, and I respect that autonomy. But personally, I cannot endorse or encourage cosmetic interventions. If someone proceeds anyway, I hope they do so with serious due diligence, full understanding of risks, and without relying on marketing or social鈥憁edia success stories.

For me, dignity lies in accepting ourselves and others 鈥 especially in a world where not everyone even has the luxury of this kind of choice.