Three women who were diagnosed with HIV after getting 'vampire facial' procedures at an unlicensed New Mexico medical spa are believed to be the first documented cases of people contracting the virus through a cosmetic procedure using needles, federal health officials said.
Read Also
- What Israel’s strategic corridor in Gaza reveals about its postwar plans
- Why did France block TikTok to quell unrest in New Caledonia?
- Turkey's Erdogan pardons elderly generals imprisoned over 1997 'postmodern coup'
- 8 EU members say conditions in Syria should be reassessed to allow voluntary refugee returns
- Does India risk US sanctions over Iran’s Chabahar Port deal?
- The misogyny of the anti-protest
- Colombia hunts for assailants after Bogota prison director shot dead
- North Korea continues recent spate of weapons tests, South says
- Suspect in shooting of Slovak prime minister is escorted to his home as police search for evidence
- PM Sonko criticises French military bases, Western push for gay rights in Senegal
Latest CBC
- Intelligence chief warns Canadians that China can use TikTok to spy on them
- 'That was a lie!' Trump's team tries to make jury doubt Cohen
- Canada sanctions 'extremist' Israeli settlers
- IN PHOTOS | Best of Cannes red carpet arrivals
- Politicians in polarized Slovakia call for calm after shooting of prime minister
- Police eject pro-Palestinian protesters from University of California, Irvine
- Haitians fight for survival as gang crisis takes over country
- At the Trump trial, the grilling of Michael Cohen commences
- IN PHOTOS | Backstage and in the ring: At the Westminster dog show
- OpenAI previews chatbot with real-time voice capabilities