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05

Mar 2022

Last Updated: 04/03/2022

Harrogate medical professionals welcome crackdown on botched Botox and fillers

by Tamsin O'Brien

| 05 Mar, 2022
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Harrogate medical professionals have welcomed new laws which will require people administering Botox or fillers to have a licence. The government has announced an amendment to the Health and Care Bill which intends to introduce a licensing regime for non-surgical cosmetic procedures. It follows an “unacceptable” rise in reports of botched cosmetic procedures in the UK.

harrogate-aesthetics-1

Harrogate medical professionals have welcomed new laws which will require people administering Botox or fillers to have a licence.

The government has announced an amendment to the Health and Care Bill which intends to introduce a licensing regime for non-surgical cosmetic procedures.

It follows an “unacceptable” rise in reports of botched cosmetic procedures in the UK.

Nurse Sharon Bennett, director of Harrogate Aesthetics, on Princes Square, is the chair of the British Association of Cosmetic Nurses (BACN).

For years she has played a major role in fighting to push the legislation through, stating that it was "long overdue".

However, she said the BACN continued to campaign for only regulated healthcare professionals to be able to carry out these procedures.

Only healthcare practitioners


Ms Bennett, who also sits on the clinical governance committee for the Joint Council for Cosmetic Practitioners (JCCP), said:

"We have been part of the advisory group informing government to improve patient safety and to make some form of legislation.
"My personal view is that we don't need legislation if the government just said only healthcare practitioners can practice. Then there would be no need, because we are all regulated. That would be ideal.
"There will always be rogue practitioners, but they are at least accountable and the regulators can deal with them and get rid of them.
"However, you can currently go anywhere in this area and get an injectable. They might claim they are an 'aesthetic practitioner', but might have only done a one-day course and before this they were a taxi driver or something. That's where the problems lie."


The “scope and details” of the new regulations will be “determined via extensive engagement including a public consultation”, the Department of Health said.


The scheme would aim to bring in consistent standards that practitioners must meet and set out hygiene and safety standards for premises.

Details on the public consultation on non-surgical cosmetic procedures are expected to be set out at a later date.

Rogue injectors


Dr Claire Seddon, who is a practising GP, runs aesthetics clinics in Harrogate, Leeds and Liverpool.

She said:

"This is great news for our industry. There are so many rogue injectors about who give the ones who work with care, precisions and adhere to guidelines a bad name.
"Hopefully the licence will standardise practice, not just for medical professionals, but also for non-medics."


 

Dr Claire Seddon.



Both Ms Bennett and Dr Claire said one of the main issues was the aftercare of the patient and knowledge of how to treat them if there were any complications.

They have both had to correct treatments that have gone wrong, with problems mainly surrounding high-risk treatments such as dermal fillers.

'We can deal with complications'


Nurse prescriber Ms Bennett, who has had to dissolve and administer antibiotics and steroids for botched fillers numerous times, said:

"When you have got someone lying here, we are not just injecting them. We are watching them and we can deal with anything that happens.
"I have seen someone who has had Botox around their eye, which has affected their smile. That's because the practitioner came to low. Botox eventually wears off, so you just have to tell them to wait and it will come back.
"With filler you can actually block an artery if you go too deep. What happens then is it restricts the blood flow and the skin can die. You have to then inject something called Hyalase to dissolve the filler.
"If you are with the wrong person, it can make a massive difference."


They said there are also issues surrounding the prescription of Botox, with rogue practitioners often buying cheap unknown products online from Korea or China.

And current rules mean an aesthetic practitioner does not need any mandatory qualifications, meaning anyone can go on a basic training course and then be allowed to perform the treatments.

This is also the case when it comes to where Botox and fillers are actually administered.

'People deserve better'


Dr Claire, who has been practising aesthetics for seven years, said:

"People literally do it in sunbed shops.
"One girl who came to me went to someone who was doing it in their house. She got there and the person who was doing it was lying on the sofa in her dressing gown. She then took her into the kitchen where she was in the middle of cooking a meal and administered Botox. She didn't even have gloves on. That's what we are dealing with.
"Some beauty therapists treat it like they are doing someone's make-up, but they are injecting into someone's face. They don't have the knowledge or the drugs to treat the patient if there are any complications.
"This will 100 per cent be a good thing for the industry. People deserve better."