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View Full Version : Breast enlargement surgery in England



reach97
11-19-2008, 12:54 AM
So I was wondering about you girls out there who have had Breast enlargement surgery in England. Did any of you just get your breast done without having to go through the 2 years of dressing etc etc etc.
Or did any of you go "abroad" to get them done?
I am really interested in BBW shemales and this is something that I would like to know? Maybe also something that I would like to have done to me also but I don't really want to go through the two years of dressing first. What I mean is I would love a nice big pair without having to wait.
Thank you Sam.

reach97
11-21-2008, 01:27 AM
So has no one from England had this?

tgdebbie
11-23-2008, 01:45 AM
Hi Reach97,
I had mine done a few years ago by a company called NICSO. They are somewhere between Wigan and Blackpool, can't remember exactly where. The staff there are really friendly and didn't mind that I wasn't female or even passable. After the consultation, they asked if I would mind if they contacted my GP, and they agreed to do the proceedure. I got 400cc's in each side with gave a nice 36C.
I got the implants as a private patient and I think they cost around £3000. There was no problem with the surgeon doing the operation but he wanted to know a little bit about my history. If you want to get them done on the NHS it may be a completely different story though.
Whatever you do, good luck.

ARMANIXXX
11-23-2008, 01:54 AM
Hi Reach97,
I had mine done a few years ago by a company called NICSO. They are somewhere between Wigan and Blackpool, can't remember exactly where. The staff there are really friendly and didn't mind that I wasn't female or even passable. After the consultation, they asked if I would mind if they contacted my GP, and they agreed to do the proceedure. I got 400cc's in each side with gave a nice 36C.
I got the implants as a private patient and I think they cost around £3000. There was no problem with the surgeon doing the operation but he wanted to know a little bit about my history. If you want to get them done on the NHS it may be a completely different story though.
Whatever you do, good luck.


What does NHS men/represent?

peggygee
11-23-2008, 02:02 AM
Hi Reach97,
I had mine done a few years ago by a company called NICSO. They are somewhere between Wigan and Blackpool, can't remember exactly where. The staff there are really friendly and didn't mind that I wasn't female or even passable. After the consultation, they asked if I would mind if they contacted my GP, and they agreed to do the proceedure. I got 400cc's in each side with gave a nice 36C.
I got the implants as a private patient and I think they cost around £3000. There was no problem with the surgeon doing the operation but he wanted to know a little bit about my history. If you want to get them done on the NHS it may be a completely different story though.
Whatever you do, good luck.


What does NHS men/represent?

The National Health Service (NHS) is the publicly funded health service
of the United Kingdom.

Many women are able to have their GRS, HRT, BA done through them if
they can make it through all the hoops, and don't mind the long waiting
periods.

Main page:

http://www.nhs.uk/Pages/homepage.aspx

Treatment page:

http://www.nhs.uk/Conditions/Gender-dysphoria/Pages/Treatment.aspx?url=Pages/What-is-it.aspx

SarahG
11-23-2008, 02:17 AM
Hi Reach97,
I had mine done a few years ago by a company called NICSO. They are somewhere between Wigan and Blackpool, can't remember exactly where. The staff there are really friendly and didn't mind that I wasn't female or even passable. After the consultation, they asked if I would mind if they contacted my GP, and they agreed to do the proceedure. I got 400cc's in each side with gave a nice 36C.
I got the implants as a private patient and I think they cost around £3000. There was no problem with the surgeon doing the operation but he wanted to know a little bit about my history. If you want to get them done on the NHS it may be a completely different story though.
Whatever you do, good luck.


What does NHS men/represent?

It means the government (in some countries- UK, Canada, etc) gives you a step-by-step "guide" (aka forced requirement) on how to transition. If you want them to pay for it, you do it their way, even if its the most abrasive, time consuming, idiotic way to do it.

It's a good way to be fulltime for a year or two, pre-everything, just to get on HRT. It's not very flexible, and once you put off hrt by a couple years you have to wait even longer before talking them into implants or ffs or srs...

reach97
11-23-2008, 07:25 PM
Hi Reach97,
I had mine done a few years ago by a company called NICSO. They are somewhere between Wigan and Blackpool, can't remember exactly where. The staff there are really friendly and didn't mind that I wasn't female or even passable. After the consultation, they asked if I would mind if they contacted my GP, and they agreed to do the proceedure. I got 400cc's in each side with gave a nice 36C.
I got the implants as a private patient and I think they cost around £3000. There was no problem with the surgeon doing the operation but he wanted to know a little bit about my history. If you want to get them done on the NHS it may be a completely different story though.
Whatever you do, good luck.
Thank you Debbie. Any ideas of a website or phone number for them please?

ARMANIXXX
11-23-2008, 09:40 PM
Hi Reach97,
I had mine done a few years ago by a company called NICSO. They are somewhere between Wigan and Blackpool, can't remember exactly where. The staff there are really friendly and didn't mind that I wasn't female or even passable. After the consultation, they asked if I would mind if they contacted my GP, and they agreed to do the proceedure. I got 400cc's in each side with gave a nice 36C.
I got the implants as a private patient and I think they cost around £3000. There was no problem with the surgeon doing the operation but he wanted to know a little bit about my history. If you want to get them done on the NHS it may be a completely different story though.
Whatever you do, good luck.


What does NHS men/represent?

The National Health Service (NHS) is the publicly funded health service
of the United Kingdom.

Many women are able to have their GRS, HRT, BA done through them if
they can make it through all the hoops, and don't mind the long waiting
periods.

Main page:

http://www.nhs.uk/Pages/homepage.aspx

Treatment page:

http://www.nhs.uk/Conditions/Gender-dysphoria/Pages/Treatment.aspx?url=Pages/What-is-it.aspx

Once again, peggygee,

you bring knowledge to me.

Thank you.

ARMANIXXX
11-23-2008, 09:44 PM
Hi Reach97,
I had mine done a few years ago by a company called NICSO. They are somewhere between Wigan and Blackpool, can't remember exactly where. The staff there are really friendly and didn't mind that I wasn't female or even passable. After the consultation, they asked if I would mind if they contacted my GP, and they agreed to do the proceedure. I got 400cc's in each side with gave a nice 36C.
I got the implants as a private patient and I think they cost around £3000. There was no problem with the surgeon doing the operation but he wanted to know a little bit about my history. If you want to get them done on the NHS it may be a completely different story though.
Whatever you do, good luck.


What does NHS men/represent?

It means the government (in some countries- UK, Canada, etc) gives you a step-by-step "guide" (aka forced requirement) on how to transition. If you want them to pay for it, you do it their way, even if its the most abrasive, time consuming, idiotic way to do it.

It's a good way to be fulltime for a year or two, pre-everything, just to get on HRT. It's not very flexible, and once you put off hrt by a couple years you have to wait even longer before talking them into implants or ffs or srs...


Thanks to you too SarahG.

I didn't know that they gov. paid for breast implants over there (UK and Canada). I thought they only paid for SRS, hormones, and counseling.

SarahG
11-23-2008, 09:53 PM
Hi Reach97,
I had mine done a few years ago by a company called NICSO. They are somewhere between Wigan and Blackpool, can't remember exactly where. The staff there are really friendly and didn't mind that I wasn't female or even passable. After the consultation, they asked if I would mind if they contacted my GP, and they agreed to do the proceedure. I got 400cc's in each side with gave a nice 36C.
I got the implants as a private patient and I think they cost around £3000. There was no problem with the surgeon doing the operation but he wanted to know a little bit about my history. If you want to get them done on the NHS it may be a completely different story though.
Whatever you do, good luck.


What does NHS men/represent?

It means the government (in some countries- UK, Canada, etc) gives you a step-by-step "guide" (aka forced requirement) on how to transition. If you want them to pay for it, you do it their way, even if its the most abrasive, time consuming, idiotic way to do it.

It's a good way to be fulltime for a year or two, pre-everything, just to get on HRT. It's not very flexible, and once you put off hrt by a couple years you have to wait even longer before talking them into implants or ffs or srs...


Thanks to you too SarahG.

I didn't know that they gov. paid for breast implants over there (UK and Canada). I thought they only paid for SRS, hormones, and counseling.

You have to meet the requirements for it, which not everyone will do. Don't quote me to it but I want to say they want the patient to be at least 5 years into hrt before the patient can claim "I need implants because hrt just isn't working"- which is just ridiculous, you'll know far before 5 years whether or not you're going to get proportional breasts from hrt.

Some of the European health care systems also pay for voice surgery as well (when they laser off some of your voice box to try to make it higher pitched) but I don't know if England does.

mishadark
12-06-2008, 09:12 AM
Charring Cross Gender Identity Clinic [GIC] {NHS} follow the line that you need to be on hormones for a two year period at the end of which no significant breast development has occurred.

This is important because you do not want breast aug before any hormone development has concluded.
2 reasons:
1. hormones inducing some or even a little breast development, can provide more skin giving the option of bigger implants
[though if no real development occurs then they can implant breast forms which have ducts enabling the surgeon to inject more saline in at a later stage when the implant has caused some skin stretching/growth.
2. You do not want implants till hormone induced growth has finished as you end up with 2-tier tits.
look at any "shemale" porn sites for examples
Its not too hotter a look.