Warning over fillers and botox being offered in public toilets


Authorities, filler, Botox and Brazilian butt elevators such as cosmetic procedures such as public toilets, hotel rooms and other “shocking places” took place, he said.
The Sworn -up Standards Institute (CTSI) says that people’s lives are “at risk every day” because they call for emergency action to establish a license plan.
It also revealed online non -secure fillers and fat disturbing injections.
The Ministry of Health and Social Care, the government has made new arrangements to protect people, he said.

CTI Foreign Director Kerry Nicol, “Aesthetic industry due to lack of worrying arrangements due to the people’s potential damage scale is really shocked,” he said.
Authority, “the bad players operating in this sector” to break “urgently necessary” and an inter -government approach is necessary, he added.
Nicol said the public gave a clear indication of who was qualified to realize these procedures.
Trade standards officials said that young people were particularly concerned about injection, because finding “Postal Code Lottery” was to find practitioners who control the age of 18 years.
Always recommendations:
- Cosmetic procedures check the qualifications of advertisers
- Be careful against the practitioners who advertise and operate through social media
- Do not buy products to inject home at home
Trade standards officials are also concerned about the online filler sold in a short time of £ 20 and fat loss injections such as “regulatory supervision” in the UK.
British Health Safety Agency (UKHSA) at the beginning of this month A few people reported The suspect had negative side effects after injected fake botox.
Authorities are also concerned about consumers such as liquid BBLs (Brazilian butt elevators), including liquid BBLs (Brazilian butt elevators) to remove them and make them look larger or more round.
The procedure is very risky and can cause serious side effects such as blood clots and sepsis.
In September last year, 33 -year -old Alice Webb In Gloucestershire, he is believed to have died after complications caused by having a liquid BBL.
As it is, you don’t need a language to perform cosmetic procedures in the UK, but if this may change A prominent change in 2022 It is accepted by Parliament.
The government had previously proposed to make changes to the Health and Care Law, which would bring a plan to protect consumers from unlicensed practitioners.
The spokesman of the Ministry of Health and Social Care, said: “People’s lives are at risk by insufficient educated operators in the cosmetic sector, so the government is looking for new arrangements to protect people.
“The safety of patients is very important and we call on everyone who thinks of cosmetic procedures to take into account the possible health effects and find a respected, insured and qualified practitioner.”
In order to increase security for consumers, the Scottish government announced its plans to regulate aesthetic treatments in May.
Currently, Northern Ireland and Wales have no plan to do the same thing.
Save Face Director Ashton Collins, which provides a record of accredited practitioners, said that his establishment was “campaigning to ban liquid BBLs from High Street”.
The authority added: “We have focused on strengthening the current legislation that has not been able to protect patients from unscrupulous practitioners who have long been impunity.
“For a very long time, the regulations to protect patients have been inadequate and implemented.”