Disaster CDC releases report on first HIV cases 'likely' spread from vampire facials at ABQ spa - When trendchasing accidentally becomes bugchasing

CDC releases report on first HIV cases 'likely' spread from vampire facials at ABQ spa​

By Matthew Reisen / Journal Staff Writer
Apr 26, 2024
Albuquerque Journal / Archive
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An undated photo of the VIP Beauty Salon and Spa, where four women received "vampire facials" and later tested positive for HIV.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says the first known cases of HIV reportedly spread through so-called vampire facials were tied to a spa in Downtown Albuquerque.

A CDC report released Thursday found that four women who received the treatment at VIP Beauty Salon and Spa — and one of the women’s sexual partners — all tested positive for “highly similar” strains of HIV.

Formally called platelet-rich plasma micro-needling facials, the treatment is a medical procedure in which a client’s own blood is injected into their face as a way to rejuvenate the skin.

The report found that HIV being spread through such services “has not been previously documented.”

“This investigation underscores the importance of determining possible novel sources of HIV transmission among persons with no known HIV risk factors,” according to the CDC. “Requiring adequate infection control practices at spa facilities offering cosmetic injection services can help prevent the transmission of HIV and other bloodborne pathogens.”

The CDC investigation appears to tie the cases to a former spa client who had been diagnosed with HIV in 2012.

The case went public after a vampire facial customer tested positive for HIV in August 2018, and an inspection by the New Mexico Department of Health (DOH) found unwrapped needles and unlabeled blood tubes. That prompted an investigation by then-Attorney General Hector Balderas’ office.

After the additional cases were uncovered, DOH cast a wide net to test 198 people, made up of former clients and their sexual partners, between 2018 and 2023. No additional HIV cases were discovered through the testing.

The agency found that “incomplete spa client records posed a substantial challenge” to the investigation and emphasized that “maintenance of client records could facilitate investigations of suspected transmission at such facilities.”

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The report was released more than a year after the salon’s former owner, Maria Ramos de Ruiz, 62, was sentenced to three years in prison followed by four years on parole.

Court records show Ramos de Ruiz pleaded guilty to five counts of practicing medicine without a license after prosecutors offered her a deal, dismissing 19 other felonies, including racketeering, money laundering, fraud and attempted tax evasion.

Ramos de Ruiz is currently behind bars at the Springer Women’s Correctional Facility.

The DOH inspection found that Ramos de Ruiz had a cosmetologist license, but the license on display at the salon expired in 2013. Inspectors also found phony certificates on display, including a certificate for Ramos de Ruiz to administer “vampire facials.”

The CDC’s investigation, according to the report, discovered “an HIV cluster” tied to treatments from a salon owner who “operated without appropriate licenses at multiple locations and did not have an appointment scheduling system that stored client contact information.”

The four women were between the ages of 40 and 60 and were diagnosed with HIV between 2018, when the spa was shut down, and 2023. Those four women and one of their sexual partners were confirmed to “have highly similar HIV strains” related to the spa.

One woman had Stage 1 HIV, the earliest stage, and the other three had full-blown AIDS when they were diagnosed, according to the report. Two of the latter patients learned they were infected after being hospitalized in 2021 and 2023 with “an AIDS-defining illness.”

The CDC report found that the clients were “likely” infected by vampire facials but noted, “however, the source of contamination remains unknown.”

“Requiring adequate infection control practices and maintenance of client records at spa facilities offering cosmetic injection services can help prevent the transmission of HIV and other bloodborne pathogens and ensure adequate traceback and notification in the event of adverse clinical outcomes, respectively,” according to the CDC’s findings.

Between this and the Neanderthal furry kidnapping a teenager, Albuquerque sure has taken a wrong turn.
 
I was confused by this as well. I believe they are saying that these were the first cases of HIV spread via this procedure, not how HIV first came to be. Perhaps this was misleading on purpose, lol.
Or maybe the first out of the clusters in their area? Like maybe a ton of people there have HIV now and they've just figured out the patient zero of Albuquerque?
 
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Or maybe the first out of the clusters in their area? Like maybe a ton of people there have HIV now and they've just figured out the patient zero of Albuquerque?
Could be, but the article and especially the headline, seems to want you to think they are talking about GRIDS/HIV/AIDS in general.
 
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What did they expect? Many times when people do gimmicky parties, the last thing in their mind is proper sterilization and checking of equipment. And the worst part? The red cross has been taking blood from faggots. So you both have unofficial retards handling AIDs blood and Official medical professionals also handling AIDs blood.

Clownworld. Unironically, your best bet for decent medical treatment is somewhere outside of the US.
 
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The red cross has been taking blood from faggots. So you both have unofficial retards handling AIDs blood and Official medical professionals also handling AIDs blood.
For PRP the primary reason it has looser regulations is because it is supposed to be a "homologous" donation. I.E. the donor and patient are the same person. It's supposed to be harvesting blood/marrow to spin down and inject in the person it was taken from. This was almost certainly a failure to sanitize or reusing equipment, not a tainted supply.
 
Who in their right mind decides a "Vampire Facial" is what I need, it will make me hot like those dudes on Twilight or some shit. If anything I would kinda expect to get some nasty disease from getting anykind of treatment that involves blood somewhere that isn't a freaking hospital or doctor's office prepared to deal with that knda stuff
 
Another potential error source is that you need to process the blood I think for this? Dont you spin it down and take the liquid fraction to inject?
I don’t think I’d trust a beautician to put my blood and a few others in a centrifuge and get the right vial back out. So it could be contaminated equipment, reusing needles and also sample mix ups.
 
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