The narrative reads almost like a cautionary tale that no one wanted to hear. On a Wednesday morning in August of last year, Joy Barbera, 48, entered an outpatient facility in Houston. Her husband was riding a motorcycle through the Rockies the following afternoon when his phone rang with news that no one ever prepares for. Her breathing had stopped. Someone had tried CPR. The voice on the line said that things were not going well.
The way it started has a very commonplace quality. a FaceTime conversation before the procedure. A grin. The phrase “I love you.” Like many women in their forties who have drastically lost weight while taking GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy, Barbera was pursuing the last phase of her metamorphosis, which the drug itself is unable to bring about. loose skin. sagging shapes. The body she stared at in the mirror was frustratingly different from the one she had worked toward. It’s difficult to ignore how frequently a surgeon’s knife is now used to close that gap.
| Information | Details |
|---|---|
| Name | Joy Barbera |
| Age at Death | 48 years old |
| Residence | United States |
| Date of Surgery | August 13, 2025 |
| Location | Memorial Ambulatory Surgery Center, Houston, Texas |
| Procedures Performed | Six, including BBL, breast augmentation, and brachioplasty |
| Duration of Surgery | Approximately 10 hours |
| Surgeon Named in Lawsuit | Dr. Kendall Roehl |
| Anesthesiologist Named | Dr. Yiu-Hei Ching |
| Husband | Peter Ginnegar |
| Legal Action | Civil lawsuit filed in March 2026 |
| Reported Cause | Cardiac arrest, brain death following post-operative complications |
| Background Context | Post-weight-loss skin removal after GLP-1 use |
The sheer amount of work that was done in a single sitting is what makes this case unique and what her widower, Peter Ginnegar, is determined to explain to the public. Six steps. A butt lift from Brazil. a breast augmentation. a lift of the arms. Ten hours or so under anesthesia in an outpatient setting—that is, without a hospital, an overnight critical care unit down the hall, or a full surgical team on call in case of the kind of cardiovascular event that prolonged anesthesia can cause. Other surgeons had flatly rejected the combined procedure, Ginnegar told reporters. They said it was too risky.
I keep thinking about that particular detail. According to his account, several doctors rejected the request. No one did.

For years, the outpatient surgery sector has been steadily growing thanks to reduced overhead, quicker turnover, and a growing number of patients who consider cosmetic procedures to be standard maintenance. Walking past these glassy, spa-like clinics gives the impression that the distinction between personal service and medical procedure has become less clear. It feels like a wellness lounge in the waiting areas. The brochures resemble travel guides. The true dangers of general anesthesia and extended operating times can subtly disappear from view somewhere in the softening of that language.
This terrain is also familiar to Sophie Hunt’s family in the UK. Two days following a BBL and stomach tuck, the 34-year-old mother passed away in Istanbul in 2022; her inquest was only completed in December of last year. Her sister told the BBC that she has yet to get a definitive explanation for what went wrong. The shape is eerily similar to the story, but the country and clinic are different.
What the courts will ultimately determine regarding Dr. Roehl’s involvement or the Memorial Ambulatory Surgery Center is still unknown. The defendants’ complete voice has not yet been heard. However, the more general question of whether ten-hour combination cosmetic procedures should ever be performed outside of a hospital seems to be past due for an open discussion. Ginnegar claims he wants that discussion to begin with his wife’s passing. You wonder if it will as you watch the news cycle change in a matter of days.
Joy Barbera thought she would emerge with the body she desired. She never made an appearance.

