Bahrain This Month - April 2022

health feature April 2022 23 www.bahrainthismonth.com The day after the treatment Elliana woke up in pain, looked in the mirror - and burst into tears. Her beautiful face had been transformed for the worse – a far cry from what she was hoping the outcome would be. Crying and emotional her head spinning she thought to herself: “How will I go to work looking like this?”, “What will my husband say when he sees me?”, “What will the other girls and company staff say when they see me?”, “Will I be suspended?”, “What will I do?!”. This was the stuff nightmares are made of and totally unexpected, but worse was yet to come the full effects of the derma treatment were still to surface. Over the next four weeks Elliana suffered pain, humiliation, embarrassment, and a personal identity crisis and became afraid to show her face. COVID-19 allowed her to cover her face in public over the ensuing months - her only saving grace in the whole ordeal. “Take photographs every 6 hours and keep a timeline” was the professional advice given and that’s exactly what Elliana did. It was these photographs that made up the main evidence used to formulate a court standard complaint to the National Health Regulatory Authority (NHRA), followed by advice from a leading lawyer, a criminal disfigurement complaint to the police too especially when it came to light that the medical center did not have a signed consent form for the derma treatment, did not take any beforehand photographs, did not have a brochure on the treatment being carried out, and hadn’t honestly and accurately described the treatment, its effects and long term problems that could occur. The doctor had been complacent, lacked empathy and consideration and made Elliana feel as though she was inferior. longer than she was advised it would be, she was left isolated and began to feel uncomfortable. When the treatment started, Elliana felt as though the doctor was gouging into her face and bruising it with the instrument and cried out several times in pain at the unnecessary brutal application of the derma tool. The doctor announced that this was normal and continued unabated. After the session, Elliana was told to apply her own hydrating cream and take an oral OTC painkiller. Elliana’s saga rumbles on legally and having attended a broad number of sessions and spent a large sum of money on facial skin rectification treatment at an internationally-renowned and acclaimed skin treatment center, Elliana has gradually recovered back to almost where she started. Although her skin is only now in a similar state to what it was when she underwent the maverick medical treatment, she is satisfied that she is in good hands this time. Amazingly, once Elliana was brave enough to make the problem known almost all the girls and women she was in contact with, recounted similar personal experiences or knew someone who had suffered at the hands of a rogue dermatologist. This seemed to be the ‘elephant in the room’ that everyone knew about, but no one was doing anything about - the dark secret that festers below the surface in the field of medical treatment. The aim of my complaint is to prevent this happening to other women - what would have happened to me if I was not able to afford recovery treatment is too awful to contemplate - in my job my face is everything”. “ So, how can you prevent this happening? • Ask around beforehand - ask in online groups and search for/look at referrals and complaints. • Ask if the physician has qualified on the equipment to be used and holds a valid training credential and has experience. • Ask for details of and verification that the equipment to be used is approved for use by the National Health Regulatory Authority (NHRA). • Ask if there have been any complaints against the doctor or medical clinic involved. • Request full details of the treatment in writing or a brochure. • Consider not signing a consent form unless you are 100 percent satisfied that the doctor is capable and the medical center appropriately registered, licensed and authorised to conduct the skin treatment. What to do if you become a victim: • Take good, clear photographs, in the same position daily, at around the same time. • Create a timeline of events and make careful notes about what happened/ happens as well as time spent/costs involved. • Seek the services of a good, well reputed lawyer who specialises in this type of legal activity. • Consult the NHRA (National Health Regulatory Authority) Complaints Page on the NHRA website. • Report the matter to the regulator and the police if appropriate. • Seek rectification treatment from a reputable skin clinic or doctor even if it costs more.

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