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Malaysians, beware of unlicensed beauty doctors: Court awards RM800,000 compensation over PJ clinic's botched breast fillers
Malaysians, beware of unlicensed beauty doctors: Court awards RM800,000 compensation over PJ clinic's botched breast fillers

Malay Mail

timea day ago

  • Health
  • Malay Mail

Malaysians, beware of unlicensed beauty doctors: Court awards RM800,000 compensation over PJ clinic's botched breast fillers

Sessions Court awarded RM800,000 in exemplary damages to a woman harmed by breast filler injections at an unlicensed Petaling Jaya beauty clinic, to deter unqualified doctors and clinics It said Malaysians should check if those giving them beauty treatments are actually doctors and whether they have Health Ministry-issued qualification to carry out aesthetic treatments It was also determined that consent form signed by patients are invalid, if the doctor did not tell the patient that they are not qualified to carry out the procedure KUALA LUMPUR, July 30 — Malaysians should make sure to ask doctors if they have the Health Ministry's licence to carry out aesthetic and beauty treatments on them, the Sessions Court in Kuala Lumpur has said in its RM800,000 decision over a breast filler injection procedure. In this medical negligence case, Sessions Court judge Saifullah Bhatti ordered a doctor who did not have the licence, a Petaling Jaya beauty clinic found to be unlicensed, and the beauty clinic's owner, to pay RM800,000 in exemplary damages to a woman over the injection of fillers into her breasts. In this case, the woman — identified only as R for privacy purposes — had experienced pain and swelling after the breast filler injections in 2020. This resulted in her later visiting multiple other doctors, undergoing two MRI scans, and undergoing three surgeries in 2021 and 2024 to remove the fillers, as well as other treatments. With the Sessions Court able to handle cases involving a maximum RM1 million amount, judge Saifullah yesterday said the compensation amount of RM800,000 would send a strong message to doctors in Malaysia to get their qualifications and only do medical procedures that are covered by their licences. The Sessions Court noted that exemplary damages are meant to raise awareness to the public on the issues in a case, and to make an example out of those being sued and to deter them from repeating the same actions they were sued for. The Sessions Court noted that the High Court had in another case in November 2024 awarded RM100,000 in exemplary damages to deter 'beauty clinics which have mushroomed nationwide offering beauty aesthetics surgeries' from performing procedures that are not covered in their licences. The Sessions Court said there is increasingly alarming news of more and more doctors being caught for performing procedures without licence: 'In many cases around the world and not just in Malaysia, patients are sometimes left to die bleeding on the operating table.' Even with the High Court having awarded RM100,000 in the 2024 case, there continues to be news of such rampant doctors, and the Sessions Court judge noted that the RM100,000 sum has not been potent enough to deter such doctors. In Malaysia, the Health Ministry's guidelines require doctors to get the ministry's 'Letter of Credentialling and Privileging' (LCP) or qualification before they can carry out aesthetic procedures — including breast filler injections — on patients. In R's case, the Sessions Court judge said the RM800,000 exemplary damages award was necessary to let Malaysians know they should check on doctors carrying out beauty treatments on them. While anyone can be blamed for not asking basic questions 'such as whether the person treating them is in the first place a doctor', the Sessions Court judge said it is harder to expect the public to know that the doctor must also have an LCP to carry out the aesthetic procedure on them. 'As such, in deciding this case, and in granting exemplary damages, it is hoped that the general public is more aware of this issue and they should now be on notice to take all necessary precautions when consulting doctors for aesthetic procedures including asking all the right questions regarding your doctors qualifications – specifically whether they have the LCP,' the judge said in a 66-page judgment released yesterday. The judge said the RM800,000 sum was justified as the case involves 'public health and safety and holding recalcitrant doctors accountable to medical law, regulations and ethics', and that it was a fair amount that should remind all doctors to get their qualifications and to stay within the limits of their certifications and their LCP. In arriving at the RM800,000 figure, the judge had noted the facts where the doctor did not have an LCP; and that the doctor had failed the examination for the LCP but her 'niat tertunda' or her intention to resit for the examination was postponed because of the movement control orders during the Covid-19 pandemic. The judge also noted that the doctor had taken her lack of the LCP more lightly than she should have as she tried to cite other inapplicable course certificates to insist she was qualified; and that the doctor had misrepresented to R that she would be injected with 100 per cent pure hyaluronic acid fillers but instead injected her with a filler which was lab-tested to be 'primarily composed of silicone'. The judge said the doctor had gone on to perform a drainage procedure on R without an LCP; and that the aesthetic centre and its owner had allowed the doctor to carry out those two procedures on R without an LCP; and that there was no proof that the aesthetic centre and its owner had Health Ministry-required licence to carry out the business. Ultimately, the Sessions Court awarded the woman R with compensation totalling RM919,009.60 in the form of RM800,000 exemplary damages, RM85,000 in general damages for her pain and suffering; and RM34,009.60 in special damages; and also awarded RM25,000 in costs to her. What R's lawsuit was about and what the court decided In her lawsuit filed in April 2023 at the Sessions Court in Kuala Lumpur, the patient R had sued Dr S, the aesthetic centre's owner SHA, and the aesthetic centre's company F to claim for compensation. R's lawsuit claimed that Dr S was negligent by carrying out an aesthetic medical procedure without proper accreditation or licensing and failing to comply with the accepted standard of care by injecting the wrong filler into R's breasts. R claimed that the other two sued were negligent by appointing an unlicensed medical practitioner to perform the procedure and for failing to meet the appropriate standard of care that was expected of them as a medical facility. The Sessions Court found Dr S to be negligent as she performed the procedure on R without the LCP accreditation, also noting that Dr S had failed to disclose to R that she was not legally qualified to perform the procedure. Dr S was also found liable, as R would not have suffered the injuries if she had not used a filler that was later found to be primarily composed of silicone. While Dr S claimed that R had accepted the risks by signing a consent form before the breast filler procedure, the Sessions Court said the patient could not have consented to what had happened to her as she had consented to a pure HA injection instead of a mainly-silicone injection. 'When a doctor performs a procedure without disclosing the fact they are not qualified (such as what happened in this case), any consent obtained under that present is invalid,' the judge said, having noted that a previous High Court decision had found that such failure would undermine a patient's ability to make informed decisions about their treatment. The Sessions Court also found SHA and F to be negligent, noting that the beauty clinic's claimed Petaling Jaya City Council licence was irrelevant as it would only be a local authority's permit to run a healthcare business and is not a valid Health Ministry-required permit to perform medical aesthetics procedures. The Sessions Court said the man SHA is just as liable as Dr S as they were business partners; and the beauty clinic's company F is a healthcare facility which had not shown any accreditation or licensing required under the Private Healthcare Facilities And Services Act 1998 and that it was not qualified to 'play host to what was essentially an unlicensed and therefore illegal business'. R was represented by lawyers Dayang Roziekah Ussin, Abu Daud Abd Rahim and Nik Amalia Suraya Nik Muhammad; while the three sued were represented by lawyer Fakhrul Azman Abu Hasan.

Malaysians, beware of unlicensed beauty doctors: Court awards RM800,000 compensation over PJ clinic's botched breast filler injection
Malaysians, beware of unlicensed beauty doctors: Court awards RM800,000 compensation over PJ clinic's botched breast filler injection

Malay Mail

timea day ago

  • Health
  • Malay Mail

Malaysians, beware of unlicensed beauty doctors: Court awards RM800,000 compensation over PJ clinic's botched breast filler injection

Sessions Court awarded RM800,000 in exemplary damages to a woman harmed by unlicensed breast filler injections at an unregistered Petaling Jaya beauty clinic, to deter unqualified doctors and clinics It said Malaysians should check if those giving them beauty treatments are actually doctors and whether they have Health Ministry-issued qualification to carry out aesthetic treatments It was also determined that consent form signed by patients are invalid, if the doctor did not tell the patient that they are not qualified to carry out the procedure KUALA LUMPUR, July 30 — Malaysians should make sure to ask doctors if they have the Health Ministry's licence to carry out aesthetic and beauty treatments on them, the Sessions Court in Kuala Lumpur has said in its RM800,000 decision over a breast filler injection procedure. In this medical negligence case, Sessions Court judge Saifullah Bhatti ordered a doctor who did not have the licence, a Petaling Jaya beauty clinic found to be unlicensed, and the beauty clinic's owner, to pay RM800,000 in exemplary damages to a woman over the injection of fillers into her breasts. In this case, the woman — identified only as R for privacy purposes — had experienced pain and swelling after the breast filler injections in 2020. This resulted in her later visiting multiple other doctors, undergoing two MRI scans, and undergoing three surgeries in 2021 and 2024 to remove the fillers, as well as other treatments. With the Sessions Court able to handle cases involving a maximum RM1 million amount, judge Saifullah yesterday said the compensation amount of RM800,000 would send a strong message to doctors in Malaysia to get their qualifications and only do medical procedures that are covered by their licences. The Sessions Court noted that exemplary damages are meant to raise awareness to the public on the issues in a case, and to make an example out of those being sued and to deter them from repeating the same actions they were sued for. The Sessions Court noted that the High Court had in another case in November 2024 awarded RM100,000 in exemplary damages to deter 'beauty clinics which have mushroomed nationwide offering beauty aesthetics surgeries' from performing procedures that are not covered in their licences. The Sessions Court said there is increasingly alarming news of more and more doctors being caught for performing procedures without licence: 'In many cases around the world and not just in Malaysia, patients are sometimes left to die bleeding on the operating table.' Even with the High Court having awarded RM100,000 in the 2024 case, there continues to be news of such rampant doctors, and the Sessions Court judge noted that the RM100,000 sum has not been potent enough to deter such doctors. In Malaysia, the Health Ministry's guidelines require doctors to get the ministry's 'Letter of Credentialling and Privileging' (LCP) or qualification before they can carry out aesthetic procedures — including breast filler injections — on patients. In R's case, the Sessions Court judge said the RM800,000 exemplary damages award was necessary to let Malaysians know they should check on doctors carrying out beauty treatments on them. While anyone can be blamed for not asking basic questions 'such as whether the person treating them is in the first place a doctor', the Sessions Court judge said it is harder to expect the public to know that the doctor must also have an LCP to carry out the aesthetic procedure on them. 'As such, in deciding this case, and in granting exemplary damages, it is hoped that the general public is more aware of this issue and they should now be on notice to take all necessary precautions when consulting doctors for aesthetic procedures including asking all the right questions regarding your doctors qualifications – specifically whether they have the LCP,' the judge said in a 66-page judgment released yesterday. The judge said the RM800,000 sum was justified as the case involves 'public health and safety and holding recalcitrant doctors accountable to medical law, regulations and ethics', and that it was a fair amount that should remind all doctors to get their qualifications and to stay within the limits of their certifications and their LCP. In arriving at the RM800,000 figure, the judge had noted the facts where the doctor did not have an LCP; and that the doctor had failed the examination for the LCP but her 'niat tertunda' or her intention to resit for the examination was postponed because of the movement control orders during the Covid-19 pandemic. The judge also noted that the doctor had taken her lack of the LCP more lightly than she should have as she tried to cite other inapplicable course certificates to insist she was qualified; and that the doctor had misrepresented to R that she would be injected with 100 per cent pure hyaluronic acid fillers but instead injected her with a filler which was lab-tested to be 'primarily composed of silicone'. The judge said the doctor had gone on to perform a drainage procedure on R without an LCP; and that the aesthetic centre and its owner had allowed the doctor to carry out those two procedures on R without an LCP; and that there was no proof that the aesthetic centre and its owner had Health Ministry-required licence to carry out the business. Ultimately, the Sessions Court awarded the woman R with compensation totalling RM919,009.60 in the form of RM800,000 exemplary damages, RM85,000 in general damages for her pain and suffering; and RM34,009.60 in special damages; and also awarded RM25,000 in costs to her. What R's lawsuit was about and what the court decided In her lawsuit filed in April 2023 at the Sessions Court in Kuala Lumpur, the patient R had sued Dr S, the aesthetic centre's owner SHA, and the aesthetic centre's company F to claim for compensation. R's lawsuit claimed that Dr S was negligent by carrying out an aesthetic medical procedure without proper accreditation or licensing and failing to comply with the accepted standard of care by injecting the wrong filler into R's breasts. R claimed that the other two sued were negligent by appointing an unlicensed medical practitioner to perform the procedure and for failing to meet the appropriate standard of care that was expected of them as a medical facility. The Sessions Court found Dr S to be negligent as she performed the procedure on R without the LCP accreditation, also noting that Dr S had failed to disclose to R that she was not legally qualified to perform the procedure. Dr S was also found liable, as R would not have suffered the injuries if she had not used a filler that was later found to be primarily composed of silicone. While Dr S claimed that R had accepted the risks by signing a consent form before the breast filler procedure, the Sessions Court said the patient could not have consented to what had happened to her as she had consented to a pure HA injection instead of a mainly-silicone injection. 'When a doctor performs a procedure without disclosing the fact they are not qualified (such as what happened in this case), any consent obtained under that present is invalid,' the judge said, having noted that a previous High Court decision had found that such failure would undermine a patient's ability to make informed decisions about their treatment. The Sessions Court also found SHA and F to be negligent, noting that the beauty clinic's claimed Petaling Jaya City Council licence was irrelevant as it would only be a local authority's permit to run a healthcare business and is not a valid Health Ministry-required permit to perform medical aesthetics procedures. The Sessions Court said the man SHA is just as liable as Dr S as they were business partners; and the beauty clinic's company F is a healthcare facility which had not shown any accreditation or licensing required under the Private Healthcare Facilities And Services Act 1998 and that it was not qualified to 'play host to what was essentially an unlicensed and therefore illegal business'. R was represented by lawyers Dayang Roziekah Ussin, Abu Daud Abd Rahim and Nik Amalia Suraya Nik Muhammad; while the three sued were represented by lawyer Fakhrul Azman Abu Hasan.

High Court upholds RM780,000 awarded to sacked exec
High Court upholds RM780,000 awarded to sacked exec

Free Malaysia Today

time2 days ago

  • Business
  • Free Malaysia Today

High Court upholds RM780,000 awarded to sacked exec

The High Court in George Town, Penang, upheld an earlier decision by the Industrial Court. GEORGE TOWN : The High Court here has upheld an Industrial Court's decision awarding nearly RM800,000 in back wages and compensation to a senior employee of a semiconductor firm who was wrongfully dismissed in 2018. The High Court's decision will see Kon Siang Boon, a former global account manager at Molex (Malaysia) Sdn Bhd, retaining the RM789,333.58 awarded to him by the Industrial Court last year. The High Court also ordered the company to pay RM7,500 in costs. Justice Anand Ponnudurai, in his ruling today, said there was no error of law in the Industrial Court's findings, and that the court had rightfully preferred Kon's version of events over the company's, based on the credibility of witnesses. Kon, who had been attached with the company for nearly 30 years, was accused of making fraudulent claims while on a business trip, which Molex claimed breached company policy, and was subsequently sacked in 2018 after a domestic inquiry. The Industrial Court, however, found the dismissal unjustified and procedurally flawed. At the time of his dismissal, he was earning over RM21,000 a month, with bonuses and allowances. According to the facts of the case, from 2016 to November 2017, Kon submitted meal and transport claims under the prevailing company travel policy, which were all approved by his superiors. Molex revised this policy on Nov 1, 2017, to bar meal claims. However, the Industrial Court found that this revised policy had not been clearly communicated to Kon. The court accepted Kon's testimony that he only became aware of the new rules in December 2017 and had stopped making such claims after that. In delivering his ruling, Anand said the Industrial Court's decision was reasonable and backed by detailed analysis.

RM800k for Beaufort orphanage renovation
RM800k for Beaufort orphanage renovation

Daily Express

time3 days ago

  • General
  • Daily Express

RM800k for Beaufort orphanage renovation

Published on: Monday, July 28, 2025 Published on: Mon, Jul 28, 2025 Text Size: Musa (left) visiting the orphanage. Kota Kinabalu: Sabah Governor Tun Musa Aman urged orphans to study diligently and strive for a successful future, pointing out that their circumstances should not hinder their progress. 'Fate has made them orphans, but this should not stop them from achieving success like other children,' he said during his visit to the Rumah Anak Yatim Al Aman in Beaufort. He also called on the public to continue showing love and support to orphans, ensuring they grow up in a nurturing environment conducive to learning. During the visit, Musa inspected various sections of the 40-year-old orphanage and announced plans for its renovation, with an estimated cost of RM800, 000. The upgrades aim to improve living conditions for the children in the near future. * Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel and Telegram for breaking news alerts and key updates! * Do you have access to the Daily Express e-paper and online exclusive news? Check out subscription plans available. Stay up-to-date by following Daily Express's Telegram channel. Daily Express Malaysia

More R&D to produce local fruits year-round
More R&D to produce local fruits year-round

The Star

time3 days ago

  • Business
  • The Star

More R&D to produce local fruits year-round

KLANG: Thailand and Japan have been used as reference points in research and development (R&D) for seasonal fruits to achieve year-round production. Agriculture and Food Security Minister Datuk Seri Mohamad Sabu ( pic ) said the effort, undertaken by the Agriculture Department and the Malaysian Agricultural Research and Development Institute (Mardi), is in line with the campaign to promote local fruits and vegetables. 'We are carrying out R&D to produce new seeds and so on. 'The Mardi durian, for example, was produced recently in Kuala Kangsar. 'Delicious (and) high quality,' he said when launching the National Campaign to Eat More Local Fruits and Vegetables at the four-day Fama Fest 2025@ Selangor here yesterday. Mohamad said the ministry is very serious about boosting the popularity of local fruits among Malaysians. As part of the effort, he said the government decided that local fruits must be served at official functions as a show of support for local farmers. 'During my visit to Thailand as Defence Minister (May 2018 to February 2020), I was served cuisine made with local fruits and vegetables throughout my time there. 'The same goes for Japan – almost 100% local,' he said, Bernama reported. Federal Agricultural Marketing Authority (Fama) chairman Aminuddin Zulkipli said the fest, which featured 50 local entrepreneurs and drew more than 40,000 visitors, recorded a sales value of over RM800,000. Since its launch in 2017, the Fama Fest has been a catalyst for the economic growth of agri-entrepreneurs, he said. Last year's event saw the participation of 949 entrepreneurs and attracted more than 492,000 visitors nationwide, generating RM8.8mil in sales. This year, the target is RM5.3mil in sales with 265,000 visitors and the involvement of 383 entrepreneurs across six locations.

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