Beauty clinic treatments 'pose risks and are unlikely to work'
Doctors have warned that there is no proof that skin-whitening drips offered by beauty salons and clinics really work and say that people undergoing such treatment could suffer side effects.
They say ingredients used in the treatments - touted as popular among celebrities seeking fairer skins - are not made by established drug companies and their quality is not guaranteed.
One dermatologist warned that if doctors misled patients into believing the treatment worked they could face disciplinary action.
They were commenting after a South China Morning Post reporter, posing as a customer, called a group of beauty salons and visited a skin clinic and was offered a series of treatment sessions at prices ranging from HK$680 to HK$1,500 a time.
A doctor at a Central clinic admitted there was no scientific evidence that the treatment would whiten skin but it had been used in the region for 30 years and there was no harm in trying it.