In a joint inspection Thursday by Beijing's Board of Health, Industry and 
Commerce Administrations, and a materia medica surveillance department, 70 
percent of beauty parlors in the city were found to have problems, the Beijing 
Morning Post reported Friday. Many are practicing plastic surgical procedures 
without proper licenses, instruments or properly sterilized rooms.
According to a recent survey report by the municipal heath department, 70 
percent of 66 beauty parlors in Beijing's seven districts are performing medical 
procedures without a license. 
Twenty percent of health-care parlors, which normally provide services such 
as massages, acupuncture and traditional Chinese medicine therapies were also 
found to provide plastic surgery services such as mammoplasty and liposuction. 
According to a health department staff member, these violations are 
punishable by a 10,000-yuan fine, quite small when compared with the profits 
from plastic surgery. 
In Beauty Harbor on Chaowai Street, inspectors saw all kinds of medical 
instruments such as needles, scissors, pliers, and liposuction pipes which Dr. 
Chen Huanran, a plastic surgery expert at the Beijing Plastic Surveillance 
Association, said were for experiments on pigs. 
Inspectors told the newspaper Beauty Harbor was registered as a health-care 
beauty parlor, and had no medical license to perform plastic surgery. 
At another beauty parlor located on the Third South Ring road, a ten sqm 
glass-enclosed room was used as an operation room, which consisted of a bed, a 
lamp, a cupboard and a cart. There were one-use liposuction pipes in a 
disinfectant boiler, ready for reuse. 
"Incompetent liposuction operations are very dangerous for patients," Chen 
said. According to Chen, in order to operate, doctors need professional 
techniques, special training, and six to eight years of operation experience. 
Stricter management and amendments to current laws are 
needed to control the beauty parlor market in Beijing.