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The launch of the Independent Healthcare Advisory Services ‘Treatments You Can Trust’ Quality Assurance register in September 2010 also aims to point the public in the direction of reputable and properly trained and qualified individuals for cosmetic injectable treatments including botulinum toxins and dermal fillers.
Yet the article in the Daily Mail failed to mention this as a resource. Instead pointing the public to BAAPS, a surgeon association, which as the industry well knows is not the main provider of aesthetic injectable treatments as they focus primarily on cosmetic surgery.
The body that regulates the licensing and supply of drugs in the UK is the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA). When it comes to their regulations on the supply and administration of botulinum toxin injections, published on their website, it states:
1. Who can administer these medicines? They can be:a. self administeredb. administered by an appropriate practitioner c. administered by anyone acting in accordance with the directions of an appropriate practitioner. 2. Who is an appropriate practitioner? A doctor, a dentist or, subject to certain limitations, a nurse or pharmacist independent prescriber or supplementary prescriber.
1. Who can administer these medicines? They can be:a. self administeredb. administered by an appropriate practitioner c. administered by anyone acting in accordance with the directions of an appropriate practitioner.
2. Who is an appropriate practitioner? A doctor, a dentist or, subject to certain limitations, a nurse or pharmacist independent prescriber or supplementary prescriber.
This would clearly, therefore, indicate that the MHRA would in no way view a ‘local hairdresser’ as an appropriate practitioner to administer botulinum toxin injections and no doubt they and the GMC, GDC or NMC would take a very dim view of any prescribing practitioner who gave directions to a hairdresser to administer the injections, no matter how many apparent training courses they had attended.
UK Botox® Trainer and Clinical Trialist Dr. David Eccleston, Clinical Director at MediZen in Birmingham was also outraged to see this statement in print.
He said; “Once again, a poorly researched article trivialises the administration of a medical procedure. It is through the administration of Botox® and other botulinum toxins by persons not qualified in medicine that most problems occur."