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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Albanians scarred by rogue cosmetic treatments

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Emira Sela covers her face with her hand to hide a disfiguring abscess, the traumatic result of unregulated cosmetic treatments now rampant across Albania.


The 31-year-old began to worry when wrinkles appeared on her face.


Sela’s hairdresser told her that a simple injection, costing around 60 euros ($65), would banish the signs of ageing. “She assured me that I would not risk anything.


She even listed well-known names” of women who had undergone such treatment, said Sela.


“I did not think twice, I trusted her without asking questions,” said the blonde woman with green eyes, her voice trembling.


Albanian hair and beauty salons lacking expertise and medical supervision are offering such cosmetic treatments, unregulated in a legal vacuum, much to the alarm of qualified doctors. A single injection of a product whose content and dosage Sela knew nothing about was enough to ruin her life in late August.


Despite antibiotics she has permanent pain, fever and nausea, while the abscess on her right cheek forces her eye to half-close and her face is nearly paralysed.


“I am so disfigured that I tried to commit suicide,” said Sela, who lost her job in a bank. Her only hope now is corrective surgery at an Italian hospital, scheduled for this month.


DESIRING KARDASHIAN LOOK


“There are more and more impostors with syringes,” said Panajot Papa, a plastic surgeon at a private clinic in Tirana.


“The problem is also the products... Forbidden in Europe, they enter illegally from Turkey or China.”


Eriona Shehu, a dermatologist at Tirana’s university hospital, said these unregulated synthetic products, such as injected liquid silicone and acrylamide, were being offered at temptingly low prices.


“Cosmetic interventions have become a lucrative industry. The patient is only a customer, exposed to a number of risks.”


Shehu said the desire to look like voluptuous US reality television star Kim Kardashian was “destroying the lives of young Albanian girls looking for beauty”.Albanian doctors say the typical age of clients for such procedures is between 16 and 28.


In the country of about three million people, the demand for cosmetic interventions rose more than 50 per cent in 2015, according to a study published by Albania’s economic magazine Monitor.


Promotional offers can be seen everywhere, such as a beauty salon advertising 20 per cent reductions for three people coming together for treatment during the holiday season.


Papa says he has treated a dozen young women aged between 20 and 27 who suffered complications after having their lips and cheekbones swollen with injected liquid silicone for 40 to 50 euros.


The product has been banned for cosmetic use in countries such as Italy and France for more than 15 years. Papa said such botched interventions left these women prone to particularly bad swellings during their menstrual period, requiring further treatment — and he warned they may suffer such symptoms for life. — AFP


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