Tuesday, September 24, 2013

'Needle risk' over beauty treatments and steroid users

'Needle risk' over beauty treatments
A health watchdog is concerned that people having beauty treatments like Botox could be at risk of infection from dirty needles.

The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence says growing numbers of people are injecting tanning agents, dermal fillers and Botox at home and in salons, and some are lax about hygiene.

Sharing needles can spread blood-borne diseases like HIV and hepatitis C.

Nice is updating its advice for England and Wales accordingly.

The guidelines, which are out for public consultation, aim to encourage people to use sterile needle and syringe programmes to stem the spread of infections.

Continue reading...

Britain urges gyms to provide needles for steroid users

Gyms should provide needles for people who inject steroids and tanning drugs to reduce the risk of them contracting blood-borne viruses such as hepatitis and HIV, British health authorities said Tuesday.

They also urged needle and syringe programs normally targeted at heroin users to look at how to reach out to people who inject dermal fillers such as collagen or Botox.

About 70,000 people injected anabolic steroids in England and Wales in the past year, according to the National Institute for Clinical Excellence (NICE), a government body which provides guidance on health services.

A study of 395 injectors published last week found that one in 18 had been exposed to hepatitis C, one in 11 had been exposed to hepatitis B and one in 65 has HIV.
NICE has now put new guidance out for consultation urging the establishment of needle and syringe programs in gyms.

"Anyone who injects drugs is at risk of HIV and other blood-borne viruses, regardless of their substance of choice," said Dr Vivian Hope, an expert at Public Health England.

"Our recent research suggests that levels of HIV and hepatitis infection among men using image and performance enhancing drugs have increased since the 1990s."

She urged "easy access for those who inject image and performance enhancing drugs to voluntary confidential testing services for HIV and hepatitis, as well as to appropriate sterile injecting equipment through needle and syringe programs."

Source

No comments:

Post a Comment