Cosmetic Procedure: “Cosmetic Procedure Went Wrong: Corrective Surgery Insurance.”

I spent $4,000 on a BBL (Brazilian Butt Lift). Three weeks later, I had an infection and fat necrosis. My surgeon ghosted me. I went to the ER, and my health insurance denied the $20,000 claim because it was a “complication of an elective cosmetic procedure.” I was left physically scarred and financially ruined.

Key Takeaways

  • Health Insurance Excludes “Cosmetic”: Standard health insurance (ACA) does not pay for elective surgery OR the complications arising from it, unless it becomes a life-threatening emergency (sepsis).
  • Surgeon’s Malpractice is Hard to Trigger: You have to prove negligence, not just a bad result. If you signed a consent form listing “infection” as a risk, their insurance won’t pay.
  • CosmetAssure: This is a specific insurance product you (or your surgeon) can buy that covers medical bills for complications (infection, DVT) for 45 days post-op.
  • Revision Policy: Always ask the surgeon for their written “Revision Policy.” Do they do touch-ups for free? Do you pay for anesthesia? Get it in writing.

The “Why” (The Trap): The “Elective Procedure” Exclusion

Health insurance covers “medically necessary” care. A BBL, fillers, or breast augmentation are “elective.”

Most policies have a clause: “We do not cover services related to or resulting from cosmetic surgery.”

This means if you get a filler embolism (blindness risk), the emergency treatment might be covered if it’s life-threatening, but the corrective surgery to fix the deformity will be denied.

The Investigation: “I Called Them”

I looked for how to protect your body investments.

1. CosmetAssure

  • The Product: Specific insurance for complications.
  • The Catch: It must be purchased by the surgeon (Board Certified only). You cannot buy it as a patient.
  • The Lesson: Only choose surgeons who offer CosmetAssure coverage. It shows they are insurable and safety-conscious.

2. Aflac / Hospital Indemnity

  • The Product: Pays cash if you are hospitalized.
  • The Verdict: Some older policies pay out even for elective complications, but newer ones often exclude cosmetic surgery recovery. Read the fine print carefully.

3. Corrective Surgery Insurance (Blink / Niche)

  • The Product: Emerging market for “Botched” insurance.
  • The Reality: Very rare and often scammy. The best insurance is a good surgeon and a savings account.

Comparison Table: Surgery Risks

ScenarioStandard Health Ins.CosmetAssureMalpractice Lawsuit
Infection (ER Visit)Maybe (Life Threat)Covered (up to limit)No
Bad Aesthetic ResultDeniedDeniedHard to win
Surgeon ErrorDeniedDeniedCovered (Years later)

Step-by-Step Action Plan

  1. Ask: “Do you participate in CosmetAssure?” If the surgeon says no, ask why. It is a red flag.
  2. Budget for Complications: Set aside 20% of the surgery cost in a “Revision Fund.” If the BBL is $10k, save $12k.
  3. Check Your Health Plan’s “Complications” Clause: Call your insurer before surgery. Ask: “If I get an infection from elective surgery, is the ER visit covered?” Record the call.
  4. Don’t Go Overseas (Without Cash): “Medical Tourism” insurance exists, but if you go to Turkey or Colombia, US malpractice laws don’t apply, and US health insurance definitely won’t touch the complications.

FAQ

Q: Does filler blindness count as an emergency?
A: Yes. Go to the ER immediately. That is a “stroke-like” event and health insurance should cover the emergency stabilization.

Q: Can I buy insurance for my implants popping?
A: The implant manufacturer (e.g., Allergan) usually offers a warranty that pays for the replacement implant and some surgical costs. Register your warranty!

[IMAGE: A graphic showing the CosmetAssure logo and a list of covered complications: DVT, Infection, Hematoma.]

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