Anger: The beautician turns out to be a "counterfeit" one. Mr. Zhang, the brother-in-law of Ms. Sun's younger sister, told the media that Ms. Sun had signed two surgery agreements with the Ouya Beauty and Plastic Surgery Clinic before her death. One was for a gynecological surgery on June 23rd, and after that, she signed another agreement for liposuction on June 25th. When he saw the agreement provided by the Anshan Road Police Station, it said that liposuction would be performed on four areas: thighs, waist, abdomen, and upper arms, but some specific contents were not written down. "We requested to copy or photograph the agreement with our camera, but were rejected by the police," said Ms. Sun's younger brother. On the first agreement, the physician's name was "Yuan", but the final signature of the physician was "Zhang Ping." The involved plastic surgery clinic has suspended its business.
In normal circumstances, the hardware of ordinary beauty salons cannot meet the requirements for surgery. They lack qualified sterile operating rooms, and surgeries are often carried out on massage beds. Disinfection is only done using disinfection cabinets, and surgical instruments are repeatedly used, which could lead to cross infections of certain infectious diseases. On the other hand, any surgery has certain contraindications, and individual conditions need to be checked beforehand to ensure safe surgery. For example, women during menstruation are not advised to undergo cosmetic surgery, and people with scar-prone constitutions should avoid large-scale cosmetic surgery. These steps are all "ignored" in regular beauty salons. If customers have certain contraindications and undergo cosmetic surgery blindly, not only will the effects not be achieved, but various unforeseen problems may arise, and even life-threatening situations may occur at any time.
Compensation: The beauty salon plays hide-and-seek. After the death of Ms. Sun, photos taken by her family showed her lying naked on a bed, with bandages wrapped around her abdomen and large blood clots appearing. Large areas of accumulated blood on both arms were also wrapped in gauze. "There were still tubes inserted in some places, I can't believe she would undergo such a cosmetic surgery," said Ms. Sun's elder sister. They learned from one responsible person at the beauty salon that after the incident, they first attempted rescue, then dialed the emergency number 120. About 20 minutes later, the 120 ambulance arrived and found no vital signs. "Why didn't you directly send her to Heci Hospital? There's just a crossing between them!" the family asked sorrowfully.
A female teacher died tragically during liposuction at a beauty salon.
According to inspections by health supervision departments, many problems exist in today's beauty market: life beauty salons arbitrarily conduct medical beauty projects, personnel engaged in medical beauty do not have professional qualifications, the technical level of practicing physicians in medical beauty institutions does not meet requirements, and they lack experience, making it difficult to achieve satisfactory beauty results. Especially, there is no fulfillment of risk notification obligations before treatment, and no provisions regarding responsibility for failed surgeries are made in contracts. Consumers only hear sweet talk without knowing the dangers involved.
A staff member of the Shifang District Health Bureau told us, "The beautician who performed liposuction on Ms. Sun impersonated a person surnamed Yuan from Hainan Province and obtained a fake ID card." From the Shifang District police, we learned that the beautician who performed liposuction on Ms. Sun was Ms. Liu, who has been criminally detained by the police. The police stated that Ms. Liu indeed impersonated someone named Yuan from Hainan and acted as an expert at the Ouya Beauty Clinic located at No. 27 Renmin Road.
On the afternoon of June 26th, Ms. Sun Hujuan, a 40-year-old English teacher at a middle school in Qingdao, tragically died during a liposuction procedure at a plastic surgery clinic called "Ouya Beauty." On the 4th, media investigations revealed that Ms. Sun's beautician, Ms. Liu, turned out to be a counterfeit plastic surgeon impersonating someone else. The involved beauty shop has closed, and the attitude of the beauty salon's management towards this matter has completely changed.
At the Ouya Beauty and Plastic Surgery Clinic located at No. 27 Renmin Road, a notice now reads "Interior renovation, temporarily closed for business," with the iron roller shutter door pulled down. The advertisement board outside indicates it is part of a chain institution with branches on Hong Kong Middle Road, Taidong, and Licun. However, when visiting the branch near the Taidong Xinhua Bookstore, the responsible person there stated that their store has no relation to the Ouya Beauty and Plastic Surgery Clinic. They independently operate a facial creation center and do not perform plastic surgery.
Question: Did the beauty salon fail to provide timely rescue?
"When we first arrived from our hometown in Shanxi, the hospital's attitude was very positive. They actively arranged accommodation for us, informed us about the situation, and discussed compensation with us. But everything changed on July 1st," Ms. Sun's brother-in-law told the media. On July 1st, the beauty salon lost contact, and the hotel where they stayed owed fees because they couldn't find the responsible person from the beauty salon.
Why can a beautician without proper qualifications impersonate an expert in a chain beauty institution? According to the family, they previously mediated under the direction of a director surnamed Yuan from the local health department, but Director Yuan suddenly lost contact as well. Out of desperation, they had to seek justice for their deceased sister through the media.
Caution: Performing medical surgeries at beauty salons carries significant risks. A 40-year-old English teacher, Ms. Sun Hujuan, from a middle school in Qingdao, tragically died during liposuction at an unqualified beauty salon. It was found that the beautician performing the surgery impersonated another plastic surgeon and did not possess the necessary professional qualifications.
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