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Some Claim Ear Stapling Curbs Appetites

A weight loss fad is just now showing up in Ohio, but there are serious questions about whether the procedure works and if those performing it are qualified.

Next month, the Ohio Cosmetology Board will become the first body in Ohio to decide thelegality of stapling ears. 

The weight loss fad that is sweeping the south and west, is just now showing up in Ohio, 10TV'sAndrea Cambern reported.

Patients believe that a tiny surgical staple can suppress the appetite and help them loseweight.

Diet and exercise helped Sandy Brandt lose 30 pounds, but she wanted more help.  Brant, whodecided to get serious about her health after being diagnosed with diabetes, decided to come to theCenter Sanctum weight loss spa in Heath to get a surgical staple placed in each ear. 

"I'd be standing in the kitchen, wondering why I was there, and I'd get into the refrigeratorand start eating," Brandt said.  "I don't even do that now with the stapling.  It'sreally helped me tremendously."

Brandt lost another 30 pounds.  She attributed it to the staples that stay in the ears forfour months.

"It's based on acupuncture sites of the ear and it actually adds pressure to those sites," saidDiana Brest, a stapling practitioner.

At Ohio State University's Center for Integrative Medicine, acupuncturist David Wang does notstaple ears.  He said that Chinese medicine uses acupuncture for weight loss.  Theneedles come out in minutes and not months.

"Some ear points are often used for weight management," Wang said.

According to the Mayo Clinic, there is no evidence that ear stapling works.  Web sitesdisagree.  Some offer one-day training, while other promise wealth if practitioners rent ahotel room and charge $75 per client.  The expenses average $5.  There is no word aboutwhat happens after the provider leaves town.

"The biggest potential risk is infection," Wang said.

An Elyria, Ohio, osteopath who staples ears puts the infection rate at 1 in 5.  Othersagree.  Infection worries Melissa Jones, the Center Sanctum owner, so she said she takesprecautions.

"We just feel that it's critical that a registered nurse or someone in the medical professiondoes perform this service," Jones said.

10TV News found four nurses, an osteopath and a chiropractor who perform ear stapling inOhio.  A training Web site claims, "You don't need a medical background."

The Ohio State Chiropractic Board has begun an investigation, Cambern reported.

"If the board finds a violation of our laws and rules, they can impose any disciplinarysanctions from a reprimand to revocation," said Ohio Chiropractic Board director Kelly Caudill.

No one regulates ear stapling in Ohio - not even the health department, medical board or thenursing board.  They said that they have no plans to do so, Cambern reported.

Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Iowa, Mississippi, and Wyoming restrict who can staple ears, orlimit it to doctors. In Ohio, the first board to decide will be the Ohio Cosmetology Board.

The board oversees 30,000 locations and 140,000 licensees, with 12 inspectors.  One of themstumbled across a beautician stapling an ear.

"It was, obviously, out of the scope of practice," said Ohio Cosmetology Board director KevinMiller.  "It wasn't something that was recognized by the board.  So at that point intime, a violation was issued."

In April, the beautician presented her case for stapling to the board.  Miller said that heworries about the quality of training, high rates of infection and weight loss claims.

"Anytime you start making those types of claims, it raises a red flag," Miller said.  "Ithink the board was very concerned about the idea of this being done on individuals after aneight-hour course."

Miller said that he did not think any other licensees were stapling ears, but 10TV News foundanother beautician and a manicurist offering the service. 

From what 10TV News could tell, ear stapling is just now coming to Ohio.  As more peopleseek ways to improve their looks, more may offer ear staples, leaving some asking the question,"Who's minding the store?"

"Until something is decided, I think you're kind of seeing it float in between the lines ofregulation," Miller said.

The Ohio Cosmetology Board meets on June 12 to decide the question.

Stay with 10TV News and refresh 10TV.com for additional information.

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