10.8 C
London
Friday, May 17, 2024
HomeHealth NewsAvoid Botox! Non-surgical cosmetic complaints reached record highs.

Avoid Botox! Non-surgical cosmetic complaints reached record highs.

According to activists, the number of complaints about non-surgical cosmetic procedures such as Botox has reached a record high.

Last year, the national registry of practitioners and clinics, Save Face, received 2,824 complaints.

The number, which includes complications from treatment, is a quarter higher than in 2020.

Due to rising complaints, public protection concerns have been raised throughout the industry’s new licencing regime.

Avoid botox! Non-surgical cosmetic complaints reached record highs.
Avoid botox! Non-surgical cosmetic complaints reached record highs.

MPs want the policy to be implemented more rapidly.

Under current regulations, an aesthetic practitioner in the United Kingdom is not required to possess any qualifications. It means that anyone who completes a training course will be permitted to administer dermal filler treatments.

The Times reports that the Department of Health and Social Care rejected requests to expedite the regime in February. Sparking concerns that the regulation could take up to three years to implement.

This is even though complaints to Save Face have increased significantly, from 2,436 in 2021 to 2,036 in 2020.

In 2022, approximately 69% of all complaints were about derma fillers, which can cost around £200.

Injections of hyaluronic acid fill creases, increase lips and cheekbones, and define them.

In recent years, as women aspire to appear like celebrities like Kylie Jenner and Kim Kardashian, their popularity has skyrocketed, causing experts to worry that Britons are falling victim to an unregulated cosmetic aesthetic industry.

Director of Save Face Ashton Collins mentioned a case involving a woman who sought an anti-wrinkle injection. But was suspected of receiving an unlicensed product, resulting in severe complications.

She said, “People think I’m exaggerating when I say this, but she had to have half her face removed due to infections that ate away at her tissue and nerves, necessitating multiple surgeries.”

Carolyn Harris, the co-chair of the all-party parliamentary group on beauty and wellness for the Labour Party, stated, “If it’s not properly governed, if we don’t give people the proper training, and if we don’t give proper accreditation and licensing to people who are properly qualified, then it could be life-threatening.”

Ms. Collins stated that the MPs’ demands that the regime be implemented by July were “unrealistic.”

She stated that interim safeguards could be implemented and urged the government to “launch a proper awareness campaign to anyone considering these treatments.”

Ms. Collins added that it could be a requirement for practitioners to have malpractice insurance, which would mean that if something went wrong, rather than having to pay thousands of pounds to remedy it, compensation would be provided.

Given the quantity of work required, Professor David Sines, executive chairman of the Joint Council for Cosmetic Practitioners, agreed that the July deadline was not feasible.

The project was “always going to take two very busy years,” culminating in a 2025 launch date.

In addition to complaints, Save Face hears scores of cases annually involving individuals who were not required to have a face-to-face consultation before receiving botulinum toxin injections. Botox is the most well-known botulinum toxin brand.

Following a series of positive discussions with stakeholders, we intend to conduct our first consultation on the procedures that will fall under the licensing scheme this summer, according to a Department of Health and Social Care spokesperson.

Twelve clinics were holding online lotteries for £5 tickets to win £650 treatment packages.

Campaigners accused raffle organisers of using “dangerous tactics” to induce Britons to undergo such treatments, including prescription ones.

They cautioned that offering cosmetic procedures as rewards could trivialize them and their potential repercussions.

Recent research suggests that Botox injections may impair the ability to recognize the emotions of others.

In a study conducted by scientists from the University of California and Botox manufacturer AbbVie. Participants who had received anti-aging injections exhibited altered brain activity in regions associated with emotion.

Botox injections, which use botulinum toxin, are given to 900,000 Britons each year. This technique reduces wrinkles by blocking nerve signals that contract skin muscles.

RELATED ARTICLES

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Most Popular

UK allocates £140m for aid to Yemen’s most desperate

According to Andrew Mitchell, the government will increase bilateral assistance to the war-torn nation by sixty percent. According to the deputy foreign secretary, the United Kingdom will spend £140 million the following year to aid Yemenis in need of food during one of the most "acute humanitarian crises in the world." Following nearly a decade of civil conflict, Andrew Mitchell highlighted the plight of the Yemeni people, who, according to him, were living "on the margins of subsistence."

Drivers abusing parent and child parking spaces is shocking

In a startling new survey, many drivers acknowledged violating one of the most significant parking lot regulations. More than a quarter (28 percent) of drivers utilize' parent and child' spaces when they do not have a child in the vehicle. This further elucidates why approximately 55% of parents need space when they visit crowded parking lots, such as retail centers and supermarkets.

After alleged jail release, Chinese citizen journalist worries

There is increasing apprehension regarding the welfare of a highly regarded citizen journalist in China who has been unable to establish communication with the international community since her scheduled release from prison. In May 2020, citizen journalist Zhang Zhan, a lawyer who turned 40, was apprehended following her expedition to Wuhan to document the initial stages of the COVID-19 pandemic. Her social media posts and videos brought to light the severe lockdowns being enforced and the government's suppression of information regarding the disease's transmission.

New $2bn US aid for Ukraine as Russian soldiers advance

During a visit to Ukraine, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken proclaimed an additional $2 billion in military aid for the conflict. Russia has claimed to have seized three more settlements and is advancing deeper into Ukrainian territory, both of which are critical developments in the conflict. Blinken stated on Wednesday, alongside Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba, at a joint news conference in Kyiv that the additional $61 billion in US aid authorized by Congress last month would be invested in Ukraine's industrial base.

Recent Comments