Botched botox, fatal blunders: is it time to rein in Hong Kong’s medical beauty industry? Complaints mount over loose rules, ‘unprotected’ clients
- Specialists urge tighter rules to cut down on unregistered drugs and procedures performed by unlicensed practitioners, with clients left nursing scars and irreversible damage
- Recent case of 19 people falling ill after fat-reduction jabs puts largely unregulated industry in spotlight again

Hongkonger Mary Lai* spent HK$45,000 (US$5,755) on beauty treatments that included injections of fillers under her eyes and a no-surgery facelift procedure.
That was three years ago. She was happy enough with the results until May this year, when hard lumps began appearing on her cheeks.
Her cheeks became unequal size, the left side visibly more swollen.
The 40-year-old fashion retailer went back to the well-known medical beauty chain where she had the injections, but it denied responsibility and prescribed her steroids.
Lai turned to several specialists before a plastic surgeon finally told her to just “live with the lumps” because surgery to remove them could leave her face scarred.
“It took me months before I could accept it and tell others about my ordeal,” said Lai, who wore a face mask for months afterwards and needed counselling.