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【Taiwan Taipe】Eight More Aesthetic Clinics in Taiwan Suspended for Six Months Over Hidden-Camera Violations

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Editor's note

This report draws on official statements from multiple local health departments and prosecutors, confirming hidden-camera violations at eight clinics. For buyers, the suspensions and fines signal heightened regulatory enforcement in Taiwan's aesthetic sector, posing supply-chain risks for clinics relying on compliant operations and raising questions about patient privacy safeguards.

Taipei, May 15 (CNA) — Five Airlee aesthetic clinics in Taipei and New Taipei, along with two Saint Eir clinics and one Dr. Shine clinic in Taichung, have been ordered to suspend services for six months over alleged hidden-camera offenses, local officials said Friday. New Taipei's Department of Health confirmed with prosecutors that three branches of Airlee aesthetic clinics in Xinzhuang, Linkou, and Yonghe districts had concealed surveillance equipment in treatment and operating rooms where patients were secretly filmed. The conduct was deemed a serious breach of Article 108 of the Medical Care Act, which bans improper practices that are obscene or endanger human health, the department said, citing a decision made at a consultative meeting on Wednesday. The clinics were ordered to pay a NT$500,000 fine each, with operations suspended until Nov. 14. Airlee Group Co., Ltd. Chairman Chang Ju-shan was questioned by prosecutors on May 6 and then held incommunicado. The investigation followed a May 2 Threads post in which a customer reported noticing a ceiling device resembling a smoke detector while changing in a treatment room at Airlee's Banqiao branch. According to the department, the Banqiao branch's surveillance footage has been deleted and is currently being recovered by prosecutors. Once full evidence is obtained, the Banqiao branch will also be fined NT$500,000 and ordered to suspend operations for six months.

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Security alarm-shaped devices with concealed cameras are confiscated by Taichung authorities during recent probes at the city's Saint Eir clinics. Photo courtesy of Taichung City Government May 15, 2026

The Taipei City Government has also ordered two Airlee branches in Da'an and Zhongshan districts to suspend operations for six months over the same offenses and fined each NT$500,000. The Da'an branch was additionally fined NT$250,000 for violating official fee regulations by setting unauthorized charges. In Kaohsiung, two Airlee branches were ordered to suspend medical services for six months on Thursday over multiple violations, including the alleged unauthorized filming of patients.

Related source image
Security alarm-shaped devices with concealed cameras are confiscated by Taichung authorities during recent probes at the city's Saint Eir clinics. Photo courtesy of Taichung City Government May 15, 2026

In Taichung, the health department found that two Saint Eir clinic branches had installed cameras, including pinhole devices, in treatment areas in violation of regulations, said Director of the city's Health Bureau Tseng Tzu-chan. One Dr. Shine clinic was found to have secretly recorded patients' medical images without consent, with 23 video clips discovered in treatment and laser rooms. The three clinics in Taichung were each fined NT$500,000 and ordered to suspend operations for six months.

Source: Read the original report | Published: May 15, 2026