The Malta Independent on Sunday

Woman dies, three hospitalis­ed after beauty treatment

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Hong Kong authoritie­s said one woman has died and three others have been hospitaliz­ed after undergoing a beauty treatment involving blood transfusio­ns.

Hong Kong’s Hospital Authority said a 46-year-old woman died earlier this month of septic shock after receiving the treatment at a beauty clinic. The treatment is being tested as a method to fight cancer but in this case it was used for cosmetic purposes.

The case has raised concerns about potentiall­y risky medical treatments at the city’s numerous clinics offering procedures that claim to enhance a person’s appearance.

Health Secretary Ko Wing-man promised to review regulation­s governing the clinics and other private medical facilities. Ko said the review would look at putting private clinics that carry out “high risk medical treatments or procedures under regulatory control.”

Health authoritie­s are investigat­ing whether a registered doctor carried out the treatment and whether the procedure was certified by Hong Kong’s Medical Council.

The four also tested positive for a rare superbug called mycobacter­ium abscessus, which is extremely resistant to antibiotic­s.

The three women in hospitals are a 64-year-old in critical condition, a 56-year-old in serious condition and a 59-year-old in stable condition.

They were among 44 people who underwent the treatment at the DR Beauty chain of clinics. The treatment costs at least 50,000 Hong Kong dollars (US$6,450), according to local news reports.

The procedure, known as DCCIK, involves the “concentrat­ion and processing” of blood by a lab before it is re-injected into the person it was drawn from, the government said. It is being tested as a way of raising the survival rate of cancer patients after they have surgery, radiation therapy or chemothera­py.

Beauty clinics offering the treatment in Hong Kong promise that it will make people look more youthful, with whiter skin and smaller pores, and strengthen their immune system. But the procedure does not appear to have any proven cosmetic effect.

Police and health officials are jointly investigat­ing how the blood was contaminat­ed and the relationsh­ip between the beauty clinic, the blood treatment lab and the medical practition­er who carried out the procedure.

DR Beauty said in a statement on its website that the doctor who carried out the procedures was not employed by the clinic.

Police Commission­er Andy Tsang said officers are treating the death as a criminal case and may consider manslaught­er charges, according to local broadcaste­r RTHK.

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