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Why Psychological Screening is the Wrong Model in Aesthetics
The medical aesthetics industry has spent years talking about the need to identify unsuitable patients. On paper, that sounds sensible. If a big part of the risk sits in patient motivation, expectations, or appearance-related distress, then screening for those issues can seem like the obvious answer. However, that logic falls apart when it meets the real conditions of cosmetic care.
You Can’t “Spot” BDD. Stop Pretending You Can.
What’s happening right now in the aesthetics industry around Body Dysmorphic Disorder (BDD) awareness isn’t progress. It’s performance.
People are chasing titles, panels and hashtags about “psychological safety” without understanding the first thing about it. Performative “safeguarding” and spreading misinformation does more harm than doing nothing.
Understanding the Importance of Ethical Aesthetic Care: The PREPÆRE™ Patient Hub
The PREPÆRE™ Patient Hub is a free resource aesthetic practitioners can refer patients to at any time. One of the most important parts of ethical aesthetic care is knowing when not to treat. Sometimes, a patient’s expectations may be unrealistic. Other times, they may have had too much work already. In some cases, something just feels off. But what happens after you say no ? Too often, the answer is nothing. There is no guidance, no follow-up, just a polite rejection. While the clinical...
Understanding Psychological Screening in Aesthetics
Since July 2023, Australia has introduced some of the strictest rules in the world around psychological screening in aesthetics. The goal is well-intentioned: to safeguard patients, especially those vulnerable to mental health challenges like Body Dysmorphic Disorder (BDD). But while the policy sounds protective on paper, the reality is much more complex.
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