<p>British lawmakers called for a ban on lip fillers and Botox for under-18s on Friday amid concerns that reality TV stars from shows such as "Love Island" are fueling a surge in schoolgirls having risky facial injections.</p>.<p>They said it was outrageous that children could legally get cosmetic treatments, putting them at risk of infections, scarring, tissue death and even blindness.</p>.<p>Lawmakers told of girls coming close to having their lips partially amputated following complications, and called for greater regulation of a sector that industry experts described as a "free for all".</p>.<p>"We must stop the dangerous and unnecessary non-medical procedures that can ruin children's lives," said Conservative parliamentarian Laura Trott, who is spearheading a bill to criminalise the provision of Botox and fillers to under-18s.</p>.<p>She said one survey suggested 100,000 under-16s had had cosmetic treatments.</p>.<p>"The absence of a legal age limit for Botox and dermal fillers means any 15-year-old could walk into a shop and get their lips injected by someone with no qualifications whatsoever," Trott told parliament.</p>.<p>"This cannot be allowed to continue."</p>.<p>Parliamentarians blamed the influence of social media for the normalisation of cosmetic treatments among the young as they voiced support for the bill.</p>.<p>Complaints of botched treatments have skyrocketed, according to Save Face, a national register of accredited practitioners which campaigns for strong regulation.</p>.<p>Director Ashton Collins said the craze for lip fillers was being driven by social media influencers and celebrities from shows including "Love Island" and "Keeping up with the Kardashians".</p>.<p>She said unscrupulous practitioners were flooding social media with unfeasibly cheap offers for multiple treatments, called "Kim Kardashian packages" and "Kylie Jenner packages", alongside pictures of the celebrities.</p>.<p>"This is so, so dangerous," she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.</p>.<p>"Girls think these are risk-free treatments like getting your nails or hair done, when in fact they are serious medical treatments that could cause horrible things if they go wrong."</p>.<p>Collins said social media filters which make girls look like they have had procedures were also encouraging them to get treatments so that they looked more like their filtered images.</p>.<p>Save Face received 45 complaints of botched procedures on under-18s in 2019, up from nine in 2018. The youngest girls were 15 and almost all had found their treatments via social media.</p>.<p>Overall, Save Face received 1,617 complaints last year, most relating to untrained and uninsured practitioners.</p>.<p>Regulations in many European countries and the United States are far tighter than in Britain, where Collins said anyone could pick up a syringe, watch a YouTube video and set themselves up in business.</p>.<p>Although Botox is mostly used by older women, the anti-wrinkle treatment has become increasingly popular with very young women who hope it will prevent lines.</p>
<p>British lawmakers called for a ban on lip fillers and Botox for under-18s on Friday amid concerns that reality TV stars from shows such as "Love Island" are fueling a surge in schoolgirls having risky facial injections.</p>.<p>They said it was outrageous that children could legally get cosmetic treatments, putting them at risk of infections, scarring, tissue death and even blindness.</p>.<p>Lawmakers told of girls coming close to having their lips partially amputated following complications, and called for greater regulation of a sector that industry experts described as a "free for all".</p>.<p>"We must stop the dangerous and unnecessary non-medical procedures that can ruin children's lives," said Conservative parliamentarian Laura Trott, who is spearheading a bill to criminalise the provision of Botox and fillers to under-18s.</p>.<p>She said one survey suggested 100,000 under-16s had had cosmetic treatments.</p>.<p>"The absence of a legal age limit for Botox and dermal fillers means any 15-year-old could walk into a shop and get their lips injected by someone with no qualifications whatsoever," Trott told parliament.</p>.<p>"This cannot be allowed to continue."</p>.<p>Parliamentarians blamed the influence of social media for the normalisation of cosmetic treatments among the young as they voiced support for the bill.</p>.<p>Complaints of botched treatments have skyrocketed, according to Save Face, a national register of accredited practitioners which campaigns for strong regulation.</p>.<p>Director Ashton Collins said the craze for lip fillers was being driven by social media influencers and celebrities from shows including "Love Island" and "Keeping up with the Kardashians".</p>.<p>She said unscrupulous practitioners were flooding social media with unfeasibly cheap offers for multiple treatments, called "Kim Kardashian packages" and "Kylie Jenner packages", alongside pictures of the celebrities.</p>.<p>"This is so, so dangerous," she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.</p>.<p>"Girls think these are risk-free treatments like getting your nails or hair done, when in fact they are serious medical treatments that could cause horrible things if they go wrong."</p>.<p>Collins said social media filters which make girls look like they have had procedures were also encouraging them to get treatments so that they looked more like their filtered images.</p>.<p>Save Face received 45 complaints of botched procedures on under-18s in 2019, up from nine in 2018. The youngest girls were 15 and almost all had found their treatments via social media.</p>.<p>Overall, Save Face received 1,617 complaints last year, most relating to untrained and uninsured practitioners.</p>.<p>Regulations in many European countries and the United States are far tighter than in Britain, where Collins said anyone could pick up a syringe, watch a YouTube video and set themselves up in business.</p>.<p>Although Botox is mostly used by older women, the anti-wrinkle treatment has become increasingly popular with very young women who hope it will prevent lines.</p>