I hope no one minds that I created a standalone thread. It's just easier to keep it all together in my own thread and I can subscribe to it and monitor questions easier.

First, a bit of background can be found here -
https://www.susans.org/forums/index.php/topic,200722.0.html. And I'd like to thank Jenny for her original experience that was posted in 2013. I'd been monitoring that for almost three years before puling the trigger.
I had surgery with Dr. Kim at the end of March this year, and there were no complications. He did say I had shorter than average vocal cords and that I also had a tremor, which would require botox. The barrage of tests that were carried out had my fundamental frequency for my 'untrained' voice as quite high and I believe it is in reality 20-30Hz lower, but it's hard to know now. The botox injection was performed just after the post-operative exam seven days later, which showed that it was all healing nicely. In total I think it came out to around £7,000. If you're worried about having such a procedure done outside of your home country - don't be. It was a very modern facility with caring and knowledgeable staff (well, the X-ray across the road seemed archaic, but the radiologist was nice). You'll also be given a number of medications to take for seven days post surgery to help with inflammation, potential infections keeping your stomach sane, and to help prevent you from coughing (which is bad).
Korea was a lovely country and everyone was very nice and helpful throughout my stay. Personally, I stayed at Phil House (
http://philhouse.co.kr/index.php?lengs=en, although I reserved through Agoda) which was cheap, clean, and also had a stove, fridge, and washing machine. However, I didn't use most of those things, aside from the fridge, so the main benefit was clean and cheap.

If you are someone who wants a more 'full service' experience, this isn't the place for you, though. The trip from Phil House to the the clinic was probably 35-40 minutes and only involved one change on the subway. I found Korea to be quite cheap in most respects (seriously, take the subway, which works out to like £1 each way!), and the most I ever spent came out to around £15 for a huge box of Korean fried chicken that gave me two meals.
The following links were very helpful:
Great Site to see how to get from A to B using the subway -
http://seoul.exploremetro.com/en/#
Has lots of info about visiting Korea -
http://english.visitkorea.or.kr/enu/index.ktoGot a 4G wifi device to carry around -
https://roaming.kt.com/rental/eng/product/wibro.aspI've been able to speak since yesterday, but my voice is very weak and it resonates in my head (to me), like I have a terrible cold. It's coming out in a frequency similar to my trained voice, at least, with no effort. Later on I'll post some photos of lots of 'things' they gave me in my post-surgery pack; just need to take a few more photos. Will also do a very short recording with my super weak voice!