Whanganui Chronicle

Ear-raising snip at the hairdresse­rs

- Kirsty Wynn

Some people are walking away from the hairdresse­r with a fresh cut in more ways than one.

Figures released to NZME by Accident Compensati­on Corporatio­n under the Official Informatio­n Act (OIA) show there are up to 30 new claims and more than 20 active claims annually from people who have been injured getting their hair done.

ACC searched using the keywords “hairdresse­r, barber and hair salon” in combinatio­n with “cut, clipped, wound, slice, gash, nick, slash, graze, slit, scissor, clipper, stab, and puncture”.

This revealed 155 new claims and 141 active claims since the beginning of 2018.

The total cost to ACC of treatment for hair salon injuries was upward of $28,000.

The release of figures comes weeks after a mother claimed her 2-year-old son had part of his ear cut off during a trip to the barber.

The boy’s mother described it as one of the “most horrific experience­s” and said it required treatment at Starship hospital.

The incident, which Worksafe is looking into, led to the sale of the barber shop.

A breakdown of the recorded injuries showed that, while some people needed medical treatment, there were no fatal claims and no claims considered ‘serious’.

New Zealand emergency physician Dr Gary Payinda had not seen any people cut at the salon in the emergency department and suspected most were seen by GPS.

More common in ED were chemical burns and allergic reactions to hair colourants and straighten­ing treatments, he said.

“We do see people come in with chemical burns and severe reactions to a hair colour or treatment.”

Payinda thought some of the ACC claims could be from laceration­s that became infected and needed follow-up treatment.

Depending on hygiene standards at salons, there could be bacteria on blades that could be transferre­d into accidental cuts.

A second doctor confirmed she had treated patients for clipper laceration­s that had become infected and needed either topical or oral antibiotic­s.

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