'Unsanitary' home-based Edmonton tattoo parlour ordered to close

Get tested for viruses if you have a tattoo from Noeyez Tattooz, AHS says

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Caption: Alberta Health Services has shut down a home-based Edmonton tattoo parlour and says all people who got tattoos there should be tested for viruses. (Scott Barbour/Getty Images)

Alberta Health Services has ordered a home-based Edmonton tattoo business to close, and is advising anyone who got tattoos there to be tested for viruses that can be spread through unsanitary procedures.
Noeyez Tattooz operated from a home at 11508 32 St., AHS said in a media advisory.
All customers who received tattoo services at the location are being advised to be tested.
Dr. Christopher Sikora, medical officer of health for the Edmonton zone, said the tattoo business was operating out of a basement in unsanitary and unsafe conditions and had not previously been inspected by AHS.
Sikora did not elaborate on the specific conditions that led to the closure, but said unsanitary and unsafe conditions include a lack of sterilization, or the reuse of sharps and devices used in the tattooing process.
"Due to the unsanitary conditions that were identified during the inspection, there is an increased risk for transmission of blood-borne viruses, specifically hepatitis B, C and HIV," Sikora said.
These underground operators are relatively rare, relatively uncommon. - Dr. Christopher Sikora, medical officer of health for the Edmonton zone of AHS
AHS suspects the business had been operating for all of 2016, Sikora said, and possibly longer.
Reputable tattoo businesses should keep client records, use one ink capsule per client, wash hands and wear gloves and should offer both written and verbal after-care instructions, Sikora said. This business did not follow "many" of these practices, he added.
"Obtaining tattoos can be a very safe process," Sikora said. "Our studios which are inspected by Alberta Health Services follow those guidelines.
"These underground operators are relatively rare, relatively uncommon. For the sake of public health and for the sake of keeping our public healthy, we much prefer that if people decide to tattoo, use one of our safe, approved operators."