Botox Bust: How some doctors are breaking the rules
- Published
One woman 'looked like she'd had a stroke' afterwards
Manicure, leg wax鈥 Botox. In recent years, 鈥榳rinkle fillers鈥 have become as common for some women as a pedicure. But having a Botox injection (AKA Botulinum Toxin) is very different to having your nails done.
It鈥檚 a聽prescription-only聽medicine that has to be administered correctly. If it鈥檚 not, it can lead to infections, drooping facial features, and聽even impaired聽vision or breathing difficulties. In the UK, around 100,000 Botox injections each year.
If you want Botox,聽whoever gives聽it to you, whether that鈥檚 a beautician or a cosmetic surgeon, should also refer you to a medical professional 鈥 their prescriber 鈥撀爓ho will聽check you鈥檙e聽fit聽for the procedure.聽They鈥檒l check everything聽from your age聽to聽allergies to whether you鈥檙e pregnant.聽
By law the person prescribing Botox should be a doctor, nurse, dentist or prescribing pharmacist. While guidelines by the General Medical Council (GMC) state that they should also meet you face to face: Skype doesn鈥檛 count. Only when the prescriber is happy should the Botox be administered.
But this isn鈥檛 always happening. Instead, some Botox practitioners are giving Botox without actually referring clients to prescribers at all, while in other cases prescriptions are being issued by prescribers on the basis of just phone chats with clients.
It鈥檚 the subject of the new 大象传媒 Three documentary, Ellie Undercover: The Botox Bust.
In the programme, 24-year-old journalist Ellie Flynn poses as a client, speaking to various beauticians who all offer her Botox 鈥 some arrange for her to speak to a prescriber on the phone.
Some also tell her they are registered nurses, but when Ellie checks the medical register she can鈥檛 find any evidence to back up the women鈥檚 claims.
There are laws and GMC guidelines about prescribing and administering Botox. Doctors who don鈥檛 prescribe face to face risk being struck off.
Ashton Collins, a director at Save Face - a government-approved register of accredited practitioners - estimates around 90% of patients 鈥渁re not aware that Botox is a prescription medicine.鈥 She thinks 鈥渟ome beauticians don鈥檛 realise [either] and are being exploited鈥 though of course there are some who deliberately flout the rules.
Having Botox without seeing a prescriber increases your chance of complications. And if it does go wrong, the Botox stays in your face for up to three months.
Take Marie, 35. She had Botox without seeing a medical professional: 鈥淚 thought I was looking a bit old and haggard. So I looked into getting myself some Botox. There was a really good deal online. But after I had it, I looked like I鈥檇 had a stroke. I couldn鈥檛 pronounce my p鈥檚, b鈥檚鈥 and every time I took a drink out of a cup it was just pouring out the side of my mouth.鈥
Marie had聽no choice but聽to stay that way until the Botox wore off. The risks weren鈥檛 fully explained to her, but they should聽have been.聽
While undercover, Ellie has a phone consultation with the supposed doctor in which several important questions aren鈥檛 asked. Once she鈥檚 in the salon she tells them she鈥檚 鈥榩regnant鈥 鈥 and it鈥檚 only then that they tell her they can鈥檛 administer the聽Botox 鈥 as the聽聽are unknown.聽If she hadn鈥檛 mentioned it, they鈥檇 never have known.
The GMC guidelines say prescribers shouldn鈥檛 prescribe Botox over the phone 鈥 but a lot of the clinics聽Ellie visits聽offer a phone consultation with a doctor.聽It isn鈥檛 clear whether they know it is wrong to do so.聽聽
At one point, she is offered a phone consultation with a doctor聽calling聽himself 'Dr Shree'. His real name is Dr Shreedhar Vaidya聽-聽and聽he was struck off.聽Ellie聽tells him she鈥檚 a beautician and he tells her聽he鈥檚 still arranging for Botox to be prescribed for many beauticians. He says he works alongside other doctors to make this happen and is聽very open about how much money he makes, even showing her recent accounts.聽
鈥淵ou just ring me when you鈥檝e got a client,鈥 Dr Shree tells Ellie. 鈥淭hen we can look at them from the database and get a script聽[prescription]聽for them.聽I鈥檝e got 4200 clients, among my 80聽or so聽injectors,鈥 he reveals.
'Dr Shree' has completely denied any聽wrongdoing聽since discovering 大象传媒 Three was filming him. He has repeatedly declined聽further聽offers of interview, and has criticised聽the聽大象传媒鈥檚 methods. He insists he鈥檚聽entitled to call himself 鈥楧octor鈥 Shree.
Sally Taber, director at Treatments You Can Trust - 聽a register of聽practitioners who guarantee 聽they聽provide injectable cosmetic treatments in accordance with regulations -聽says that the Joint Council for Cosmetic Practitioners (JCCP) is opening a new register this month聽where聽the public can check whether the person administering Botox to them has met the required qualification.聽
Guidelines are being flouted by some when it comes to giving out Botox, and the public needs to be more savvy about it. As Sally says,聽鈥淲hen you have your boiler done, you always check that person is properly qualified.聽So why don鈥檛 you do it when you鈥檙e聽getting聽something聽injected into聽your face?鈥澛犅
Ellie Undercover: The Botox Bust is available now on 大象传媒 Three iPlayer.
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