Hi All....more info on this!

Interesting article from the Wall St. Journal... know about this technique??  
Thought you might want to share this with the nail tech mailing list.  Didn't 
want to send it myself.

Ban on Feet-Nibbling Fish Leaves Nail Salons on the Hook
Mr. Ho's Import From China Caught On, But Some State Pedicure Inspectors Object

By PHILIP SHISHKIN

ALEXANDRIA, Va. -- There's more than one way to skin a foot.

In his beauty salon wedged between a pizza parlor and a taco shop in a strip 
mall here, John Ho is letting small fish eat dead skin off his customers' feet.

"Feels like a bunch of ants running across your feet," said Bill Piatt, a 
Marine gunnery sergeant from nearby Fort Belvoir, after dipping his feet in a 
Plexiglas tank for 15 minutes of a fish-assisted pedicure. His wife, Leah, 
reclining on an adjacent chair, said the nibbling tickled -- "a very odd 
feeling."

Until Mr. Ho brought his skin-eating fish here from China last year, no salon 
in the U.S. had been publicly known to employ a live animal in the exfoliation 
of feet. The novelty factor was such that Mr. Ho became a minor celebrity. On 
"Good Morning America" in July, Diane Sawyer placed her feet in a tank supplied 
by Mr. Ho and compared the fish nibbles to "tiny little delicate kisses."

Some Look Askance at Nibbling Fish

View Slideshow

Philip Shishkin
Since then, cosmetology regulators have taken a less flattering view, insisting 
fish pedicures are unsanitary. At least 14 states, including Texas and Florida, 
have outlawed them. Virginia doesn't see a problem. Ohio permitted fish 
pedicures after a review, and other states haven't yet made up their minds. The 
world of foot care, meanwhile, has been plunged into a piscine uproar. Salon 
owners who bought fish and tanks before the bans were imposed in their states 
are fuming.

The issue: cosmetology regulations generally mandate that tools need to be 
discarded or sanitized after each use. But epidermis-eating fish are too 
expensive to throw away. "And there's no way to sanitize them unless you bake 
them for 20 minutes at 350 degrees," says Lynda Elliott, an official with the 
New Hampshire Board of Barbering, Cosmetology and Esthetics. The board outlawed 
fish pedicures in November.

In Ohio, ophthalmologist Marilyn Huheey, who sits on the Ohio State Board of 
Cosmetology, decided to try it out for herself in a Columbus salon last fall. 
After watching the fish lazily munch on her skin, she recommended approval to 
the board. "It seemed to me it was very sanitary, not sterile of course," Dr. 
Huheey says. "Sanitation is what we've got to live with in this world, not 
sterility."

Mr. Ho, a wiry 39-year-old, hopes the bans will lure pedicure tourists from 
fish-hostile states to the two Virginia locations of Yvonne Hair & Nails, which 
he owns with his wife, Yvonne Le. The salons charge customers $35 to have their 
feet nibbled by fish for 15 minutes.

When Mr. Ho was 5, his father put the family on a fishing boat, and like many 
others fleeing Communist Vietnam, floated out into the high seas, hoping to 
find a ship to rescue them. The Hos succeeded, and eventually settled in 
Virginia. Mr. Ho married his high-school sweetheart and the couple opened the 
Alexandria salon in 1997, while Mr. Ho continued to run a home-building 
business.

By 2007, they were looking for an alternative to pedicure razors, which are 
banned in many states as too prone to making dangerous cuts. Ms. Le heard from 
a customer about skin-eating fish in Asia, and Mr. Ho started doing research.

What he discovered, among other things, was an old Turkish legend about a 
shepherd who injured his foot and stuck it into a hot spring teeming with small 
fish. The foot healed. Word spread. A treatment center for skin ailments grew 
around the springs near the Turkish town of Kangal. From Turkey, the practice 
spread throughout Asia, employing garra rufa, toe-size carp that live in warm 
water, have no teeth and, according to those in the business, like to suck off 
dead skin. Another fish sometimes used to treat feet, called chin chin, is 
bigger in size and grows tiny teeth.

Last year, Mr. Ho and his wife traveled to a spa in Chengdu, China, had a 
full-body fish treatment and liked it. After returning, Mr. Ho wired the 
Chengdu dealer $40,000 for 10,000 fish.

At the back of the salon, he set up a communal fish tub for customers' feet. 
The Fairfax County Health Department deemed the tub to be a public swimming 
pool and ordered it closed on health grounds.

Mr. Ho then designed individual Plexiglas tanks where water is changed after 
every use and fish can't swim from one pair of feet to another. Since nobody is 
sharing the water, the county's public-pool ordinance no longer applied. 
Virginia's Board of Cosmetology has no jurisdiction over skin, unless it's a 
face. So Mr. Ho was in the clear.

In Derry, N.H., salon owner Kim Ong heard about Mr. Ho on television, and 
traveled to his spa undercover, posing as a pedicure customer. She liked what 
she saw and bought 500 chin chin from a dealer in Washington state for about 
$6,000.

To New Hampshire regulators, Ms. Ong's proposal to use fish for pedicures was 
nearly as unusual as an inquiry they once had about using snakes for massages. 
The answer, to both, was no, says Ms. Elliott of the cosmetology board.

Ms. Ong's fish now swim in a decorative fish tank and eat regular fish food -- 
or each other if they get too hungry. Ms. Ong says she plans to fight the 
pedicure ban.

State bans have disrupted Mr. Ho's plans to build a nationwide franchise 
network. Currently, he has four active franchises, in Virginia, Delaware, 
Maryland and Missouri. But others have terminated franchise agreements. In 
Calhoun, Ga., Tran Lam, owner of Sky Nails, says she paid Mr. Ho $17,500 in 
exchange for fish and custom-made pedicure tanks. A few weeks later, in 
October, the Georgia Board of Cosmetology deemed fish pedicures illegal. "I'm 
very mad," says Ms. Lam. "I lost a lot of money and the economy is so bad."

In Kent, Wash., Bamboo Nails, another franchisee of Mr. Ho, is stuck with 
thousands of dollars of idle fish and equipment following a state ban last 
fall. The ban stemmed from a spot check of another salon where state inspector 
Susan Colard says she watched the owner -- demonstrating the technique -- stick 
her foot in a tank with so many fish droppings it was murky.

Proponents say fish pedicures are safe if the water is kept clean. "It is so 
out of the ordinary that the first reaction is to say 'no,' " says Kevin 
Miller, executive director of the Ohio Board of Cosmetology.

In Nevada last month, state Assemblyman Tick Segerblom introduced a bill that 
would allow fish pedicures. Mr. Segerblom, who represents downtown Las Vegas, 
says he is acting upon the request of a Chinese constituent with a foot-massage 
business.

He made no prediction about the bill's chances. But with everyone in the 
legislature obsessed with depressing things like deficits and the recession, 
Mr. Segerblom says, "It's the most popular bill in the building."
Bethanne

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