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Jie Shao leaves the Downing Centre District Court in Sydney, Thursday, April 29, 2021.
Jie Shao allegedly claimed she was a doctor despite not being registered in either China or Australia. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP
Jie Shao allegedly claimed she was a doctor despite not being registered in either China or Australia. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP

Purported doctor faces Sydney jury trial over illegal breast augmentation that allegedly led to woman’s death

This article is more than 4 months old

Jean Huang, who operated the Medi Beauty Clinic in Chippendale, died after the procedure performed by Jie Shao

More than six years after the death of a woman who underwent an illegal breast-augmentation procedure, the purported doctor who performed the procedure is facing a trial.

Jie Shao flew from China to Australia in August 2017 to perform breast enhancement on Jean Huang, who operated the Medi Beauty Clinic in the inner-Sydney suburb of Chippendale.

Huang died after the procedure, in which hyaluronic acid was injected into her breasts as filler.

“That was a procedure which was not legally allowed in Australia at the time,” the crown prosecutor told a jury panel as Shao’s criminal case began on Thursday.

A local anaesthetic lidocaine was then administered after Huang expressed concerns about how painful the procedure would be, potential jurors in Sydney’s Downing Centre district court heard.

Shao has pleaded not guilty to one charge of manslaughter for the unlawful killing of Huang in 1 September 2017.

However, she pleaded guilty to injuring Huang by administering a poison on 31 August 2017.

The crown prosecutor told potential jurors that the cause of death was brain injury due to an overdose of lidocaine.

Shao allegedly told Huang she was a doctor despite not being registered in either China or Australia, the court heard.

The trial continues.

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