A woman who claimed to be a doctor ordered an excessive amount of anaesthetic to be used during a breast filler procedure on a Sydney beauty clinic manager, who had a heart attack and was declared brain-dead after the situation went “to hell in a handbasket”, a jury has been told.
Jie Shao, 40, is on trial in Sydney’s Downing Centre District Court over the death of Jean Huang, 35, on September 1, 2017, two days after the procedure at The Medi Beauty clinic which Huang operated and part-owned in Chippendale.
On Thursday, Shao pleaded not guilty to manslaughter but guilty to the alternative charge of recklessly administering poison endangering life, being the local anaesthetic lidocaine.
In her opening address to the jury, Crown prosecutor Sara Gul said Shao, a Chinese national, “held herself out as a doctor” and had a medical degree from Guangdong University. But she was not registered as a doctor in China or Australia, and had failed a master’s degree in the United Kingdom.
Shao arrived in the country four days before the incident.
She was scheduled to perform a “boob job” involving injecting hyaluronic acid filler to increase Huang’s cup size, Gul said. However, the injectable breast augmentation was not legal in Australia.
Huang had been worried about how painful the procedure would be and spoke to Shao about using anaesthetic “to dull the pain”, the prosecutor said.