LAS VEGAS — A Las Vegas spa where an employee was found frozen and dead
inside a liquid nitrogen chamber used for cryotherapy treatments wasn't
licensed by the state to perform cosmetic or other procedures,
authorities said Tuesday.
The disclosure followed the death of 24-year-old Chelsea Patricia
Ake-Salvacion, who was found Oct. 20 in a chamber used to provide the
increasingly popular but largely unregulated treatments for pain and
other conditions.
"When they found her, she was rock solid frozen," Albert Ake, the dead woman's uncle, said in an interview from his home in Reno.
Las Vegas police said the death doesn't appear to be suspicious and the case was closed without a criminal investigation.
Chelsea Ake, 24, died after getting stuck in a cryochamber at Rejuvenice |
Ake said he was told his niece texted her boyfriend on the night before
she was found dead and said she was going to use the cryotherapy
chamber at the Rejuvenice spa. She was also seen on security video
locking the salon, he said.
Her co-worker arrived the following day and noticed Ake-Salvacion's car
in the parking lot and her belongings in the business, Ake said.
Ake said he was troubled by reports that his niece misused the
cryotherapy chamber or made a mistake. He said he was told she died
within moments.
"Something went wrong," Ake said. "It's not operator error if she died within seconds."
Clark County Coroner John Fudenberg said no reports about
Ake-Salvacion's death had been released by his office as of Tuesday. A
determination of her cause of death was awaiting the results of
toxicology tests.
Attempts to reach spa owners Christian Chateau and Kevin Goujon weren't immediately successful.
The unlicensed spa has since been forced to shutter. |
Cryotherapy involves placing users inside a chamber with sub-zero
temperatures for just a minute or two to relieve pain. Athletes who have
long used ice baths to ease their aches and pains have turned to whole
body cryotherapy as a quicker way to recover after exercise or
competition.
The treatment also is promoted as aiding weight loss, improving healing
and increasing blood circulation, leading some salons to offer
cryotherapy facials as an anti-aging remedy. Liquid nitrogen has long
been used to treat and remove warts.
State regulators ordered two locations of Rejuvenice Cryotherapy shut
down indefinitely after owners weren't able to provide proof of worker
compensation insurance, said Teri Williams, spokeswoman for the Nevada
Department of Business and Industry and the state Division of Industrial
Relations. A third location slated to open soon was also affected.
"All three locations were issued a stop work order," Williams said.
On Monday, the Nevada State Board of Cosmetology ordered the spa where
Ake-Salvacion died to shut down because it didn't have a license to
perform skin and other advertised aesthetician services such as facials.
The agency said there was a licensed professional at the spa, but the
business itself wasn't licensed. The owners were fined $1,000.
"We didn't even know who they were," Gary Landry, executive director of
the state cosmetology board, said about the spa owners. "They had never approached us."
Clark County officials said the owners applied for a business license
in July and indicated the salon was undergoing renovations. A final
inspection was pending and the county said the facility should not have
been doing business.
Two state occupational safety agents determined that Ake-Salvacion
should not have been using the cryotherapy chamber after-hours for
personal use, said Williams, who also serves as spokeswoman for the
Nevada Occupational Safety and Health Administration.
"The facts indicate that the fatality occurred as a result of employee
misconduct or non-complaint activity," Williams said in an email. "The
employer cannot be cited ... and further investigation is not
warranted."
Ake-Salvacion grew up in Hawaii and moved to Las Vegas more than two
years ago with her boyfriend, who recently returned to Hawaii to take a
job, her uncle said. She planned to follow after another year at the spa
and hoped to open a similar business of her own.
"She was a good spirit and loved everyone," Ake said. "She had the true aloha spirit. Aloha is love."
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