And skin
fillers should be prescription only- UK experts.
LONDON - A group of independent experts has slammed Britain's cosmetic surgery industry for not protecting patients adequately and is calling for stricter controls in the aftermath of a breast implant scandal in Europe last year that left tens of thousands of women with cheap silicone implants prone to ruptures. A top British health official, meanwhile, signalled support for their recommendations.
In a review of how cosmetic procedures are regulated, the
group said all skin fillers should be available by prescription only and that
all practitioners — from surgeons to estheticians who inject Botox — must be
properly qualified. The expert group, commissioned by the U.K. Department of
Health, also called for the creation of a registry of implants and other
medical devices and an ombudsman for private health care, among other
suggestions.
The recommendations were released in a report on Wednesday.
The British government has previously rejected calls to
oversee cosmetic procedures and the industry is largely self-regulated. There
are few rules on who is allowed to perform a non-surgical cosmetic
intervention.
"Anyone can give you a (skin) filler anytime,
anywhere," said Bruce Keogh, medical director of the National Health
Service, who led the review. "This is a bizarre situation."
During an embargoed press briefing on Monday, Keogh said the
commercialization of the industry has led to some questionable claims about the
efficacy of certain procedures.
"This is a pretty data-free zone," Keogh said.
In the report, Keogh and others wrote that a person having a
non-surgical procedure such as a Botox injection "has no more protection
and redress than someone buying a ballpoint pen."
They noted that the cosmetic interventions sector has grown
by 300 per cent in the last five years and that the use of procedures such as
injecting substances to smooth out the skin make up 75 per cent of the market.
"It is our view that dermal fillers are a crisis waiting to happen,"
the report concluded. Side effects from skin fillers can include scarring,
infection and even blindness.
Catherine Kydd, a Briton who received faulty breast
implants, said stricter ethical policies should be in place for those who
perform cosmetic surgeries and procedures.
"When you see a surgeon, you shouldn't be seeing a
salesman," she said.
Regulations on cosmetic interventions in the U.K. are more
lax than elsewhere. In Denmark, anyone carrying out cosmetic interventions must
be registered with a national health board. When standards are breached, the
board can suspend a clinic's operations, impose fines, strike professionals off
the register and refer cases to the police. There is no such system in the U.K.
Keogh noted there are about 190 different types of skin
fillers available in Europe versus only 14 approved by the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration.
In a statement, Dr. Dan Poulter, a senior minister in the
Department of Health, said it was time for the government to step in.
"There is a significant risk of people falling into the hands of cowboy
firms or individuals or individuals whose only aim is to make a quick
profit," he said.
Poulter said the government would respond to the report in
detail in the summer.
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