“I have heard scary stories from people who thought they received safe cosmetic surgery and ended up with scary injuries.”
A Brazilian ‘Non -Repeat’ Operator Butt Lift (BBL) has been banned from performing any cosmetic process throughout England and Wales.
He comes after leaving a lot of people in the Great Manchester in “serious pain” after his treatment, the Trafford Council claims.
A person even went to develop septicemia and had to rush tThe hospital to receive a life -saving business, the Council said.
An order has been served on Ricky Sawyer, 28, at the East India Dock Road, East London, after a hearing at the Manchester Political Justice Center.
Mr Sawyer offers an appointment across the country – including Trafford and all over Manchester – in locations such as domestic real estate or hotel rooms.
The Brazilian lifting process (BBL) offered by Mr Sawyer is intended to add volume to the buttocks using injectors based on hyaluronic acid.
However, the risks include injury to blood vessels and nerves during surgery, bruising, infection, discoloration of the skin, changes in skin, scars, pain, pellets under the skin and under the skin Lungs, cellulite, wart deformation and asymmetric molds.
The Trafford Council Environmental Health Team submitted evidence that people were left in scary pain and called Mr Sawyer “non -repetitive”.
Mr Sawyer’s mandate prevents him from performing any cosmetic process throughout England and Wales or teach anyone else to do so. The court heard that it was necessary to prohibit a ban throughout the country.
There will be a further hearing in the Court of Manchester County on Monday, June 16, during which Mr Sawyer may perform prior to the finalization of the three -year order, the Council said.
Advisor Rose Thompson, an executive member of the Trafford Council on Communities and Security, said: “I am glad to have secured a mandate against this man. I have heard scary stories from people who thought they had received safe cosmetic surgery and ended up with scary.
“This case was particularly difficult as these emerging clinics are taking place throughout the country. Our environmental health team worked very hard, in collaboration with his colleagues at the Manchester and Salford councils, as well as the largest police officers in Manchester, to help him.
“It is vital to protect the public from harm as part of our goal that all our communities will be happy, healthy and safe.”
Mark Elliott, president of the Ecumenical Institute of Environmental Health, said: “This is a huge achievement by local environmental health professionals.
“We believe that the highest cosmetic procedures, such as the BBL, should be described as surgical and are only undertaken by properly trained, regulated and experienced GMC doctors.”
The Trafford Council encourages anyone with information on BBL exploitation bodies to contact Environmental.health@trafford.gov.uk.
NHS also publishes tips and guidance to search for cosmetic procedures.
