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Racial Loyalty News => General News => Downunder News => Topic started by: Rev.Cambeul on Sun 09 Oct 2016

Title: Paki Quacks Host Botox Injecting Parties
Post by: Rev.Cambeul on Sun 09 Oct 2016
Australian women are not safe from these feral, poison pushing quacks from the Sub-Continent. Why does the government allow it? What kickback do they get?


Botox party: Booze, fillers and drugs

Rebecca Sullivan | News.com.au (Australia) (http://www.news.com.au/) | 9 October 2016

http://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/beauty/cosmetic-surgery/heres-what-happens-at-a-botox-party-booze-fillers-and-drugs/news-story/4cc15d1a0e19b4992c2700cb8919c6df

Extract: Normally Botox elicits just a pin prick of blood post-injection, but alcohol thins the blood and tonight it drips from their faces constantly. Tomorrow their faces will be bruised. The doctor is wiping and wiping, trying not to freak out the person in the chair.

"You don't have to book an appointment. It's in your own home, it's more relaxed. You can lay down on the couch or your bed if you're scared of needles. It takes the fear out of the procedure," said Melissa*, 40, from Melbourne, who threw a Botox party last month.

Melissa found her "Botox nurse" through the clinic where she normally receives injections. She came to her house armed with products obtained legally in Australia.

You need a script from a GP before she will inject you. If you don't have one, she will Skype with a GP in India who will consult the patient and issue a prescription.

The doctor and nurse who worked at her party were keen to keep their side business under wraps.
"They seem quite ashamed about it," she said. "They were like 'Don't post anything on Facebook'. I actually think in their medical industry they would be seen as the scum of the earth."

Cosmetic Physicians Society of Australasia spokeswoman Dr Mary Dingley says Botox parties are a "ridiculous idea".

"You're getting a shonky person doing something shonky in a shonky place," Dr Dingley said.

"They may be getting inappropriate medications from dodgy sources online or overseas. It may not be the genuine article as it says on the label. It may be salt water, or another medication entirely," Dr Dingley said.

"The needle may not be sterile or it could be a second or third-used needle. They could have used those syringes on someone with a blood borne disease.

"The other thing with injections, is if they're not placed in the appropriate area there can be huge consequences. If it's injected into an artery, it could clog that area and you could end up with dead skin or potentially blindness."