A hair salon has banned anyone who has received the COVID-19 vaccine
The owner of a hair salon, who enjoys shamanic rituals, has banned anyone who has received the COVID-19 vaccine from entering the premises based on a list of side effect fears.
QLD News
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A Gold Coast hair salon has controversially banned customers who have been vaccinated against COVID-19.
Khemia Frequency Salon at Palm beach has taken to social media to post ‘we are not your hairdresser if you have had the COVID vax’.
“We have decided to implement this into our salon for the health and safety of our staff and clients,” the salon said on Instagram.
“The unknown health effects of the mRNA vaccine are not covered by our public liability insurance. We have also taken into consideration the 1000s of reported side effects this shot has shown so far, such as viral shedding of the uterus, seizures, bleeding, clotting, interruption to the menstrual cycles and death.
“We are deeply sorry for the any inconvenience to you. However the safety of our staff and existing clients is our priority.”
The post has attracted more than 700 comments, many supportive.
Owner of the salon Yazmina Jade Adler told Courier Mail she has no worry that her choice will impact her business in a negative way.
“If anything it will help my business and let people know what we believe and stand for,” she said.
“I was not expecting such a “positive” response. And I have many women and men from all over the world celebrating this decision and choice. Especially mothers and women who are pregnant.”
Ms Adler has previously been featured on SBS show Medicine or Myth? where she claimed she found a solution to relieve severe period pain by anointing menstrual blood on her face during a ritual meditation.
‘I’ve been using this remedy now for about 10 months to a year and my cramping has gone,’ she told the medical experts on the show including Australian neurosurgeon Dr Charlie Teo.
She said she found the remedy through a shamanic womb woman who told her to ‘connect’ with her blood.
“I decided to give it a go, and as soon as I started doing that, it was like it had this profound healing effect of like oh, I don’t need to be shameful of this anymore”.
Dr Teo said her ritual was very powerful but that he could not see a medical trial on it in the future.
In an another post, Ms Adler urged customers to ‘keep standing your ground’.
“When your in your truth and you follow your truth and you follow your heart, incredible things will unfold,” she said.
“It’s your business, it’s your body, it’s your choice and do what you will with that.”
Queensland chair of The Royal Australian College of General Practitioners Bruce Willett slammed the salon’s post for being “ill-informed to the point of being dangerous and irresponsible”.
“It shows a lack of understanding as to the way these vaccinations work, there’s no live virus involved so it’s simply impossible for them to be spread in the way that they are stating,” he said. “This sort of misinformation is dangerous.”