Teenager Left With Horrific Chemical Burns After Superdrug Brow Tint
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A teenager has told how a high street eyebrow wax and tint left her with chemical burns in A&E and barely able to open her eyes.
Ellie Goddard-Hyden, 18, from Walsall, went to the in-store V9 Beauty eyebrow booth in Superdrug to have her brows shaped and dyed darker. Within hours the area was burning and itchy, and two days later Ellie ended up in A&E after her face swelled up so much she could barely open her eyes.
She said nurses told her she could have gone blind and doctors diagnosed chemical burns caused by the beauty treatment.
"You expect people will know what they are doing, but she waxed first, which opened up all the pores in my skin, so I got chemical burns from the dye," said Ellie.
"I could have gone blind. Anything could have happened. I had to get through the rest of school feeling really worried about my eyebrows, which had been great before, and because I've become allergic to the products I can't even have them fixed now.
"I'm just glad I can give people lovely eyebrows in my own beauty business and be someone people can trust."
Ellie said her eyebrows had been tinted and waxed at other salons many times before she went for the treatment at V9 Beauty, in Superdrug, Walsall, in March 2018. She claims a patch test wasn't done and the woman wrongly did the wax before the tint. She paid around £12 for the procedure.
She added: "I would not have got the burns if she had done the tinting first. It happened because the waxing opens up all the pores in the skin. I didn't know that then."
Ellie initially felt fine during and after the treatment, but then her eyes began to feel itchy and it burned when she rubbed the skin.
The following day her brows were really red and sore, and when she woke up the next morning everything looked "fuzzy and dark". She was in a lot of pain and could barely open her eyes.
She went to A&E later that day when yellow pus spots appeared on her brows which were blistering, and said doctors diagnosed chemical burns.
"I could see from the doctors' and nurses' expressions that it was bad," said Ellie.
"The nurse said I could have gone blind."
She was given a steroid cream to no avail, so her GP told her to use salt water to clean the wound and she took antihistamines.
Ellie's face was swollen for a whole week, and 90 per cent of her eyebrows fell out. She still has bare patches where they have not grown back.
She felt so self-conscious about going back to school she missed a GCSE exam and was unable to wear make up until her prom nearly three months later.
Ellie has since developed allergies to beauty products, including hair dye, which she said forced her to give up her job at a salon.
But she has since completed private training and runs her own business as a beautician, taking antihistamines if she comes into contact with any chemicals.
Ellie said she was offered a refund when she went to V9 Beauty soon after the treatment, but she declined.
A spokesperson on behalf of Superdrug said: "We are saddened to hear about the experience that a customer had with an external supplier, V9 Beauty in 2018.
"As soon as we were made aware, we carried out a thorough investigation with the supplier to understand this isolated incident and to ensure the standards of service we expect are always met.
"We would like to reassure our customers that we only work with suppliers that are fully insured and all beauty therapists that work with Superdrug are fully qualified across all of the treatments that we offer."