Choosing an injectable clinic based on location is common. Oakleigh, Melbourne East, and surrounding areas offer multiple options, and proximity often becomes the default deciding factor. While convenience matters, it is not a clinical criterion. In injectable medicine, the quality of outcomes is determined by assessment and decision making, not geography. This means choosing a clinic should never begin with where it is located. Results vary between individuals and are reviewed at a follow up consultation.
Why Choosing the Right Injectable Clinic Matters
The decision about which clinic to visit for cosmetic injectables is more consequential than many people initially appreciate. Injectable treatments are medical procedures performed by registered health practitioners, and the outcomes, good or poor, reflect the clinical judgment, technique, and communication skills of the individual practitioner as much as any other factor. A treatment that is performed with the wrong dose, wrong placement, or without adequate assessment can produce an outcome that requires correction or, in rare cases, causes a complication that could have been avoided.
At the same time, the experience of receiving injectable treatment, how the consultation is conducted, how concerns are addressed, how the practitioner communicates about realistic outcomes, shapes how a client feels about the process, regardless of the final result. A technically adequate treatment delivered without care or explanation is a less satisfactory experience than one where the client feels genuinely seen, assessed, and informed.
For people in Melbourne’s south east considering injectable treatment, Oakleigh provides access to a established clinic with a specific focus on consultation based, conservative injectable treatment. Understanding what to look for when choosing a clinic, and what distinguishes Core Aesthetics’ approach from others, is the starting point for making an informed decision.
Practitioner Qualifications and Registration
Cosmetic injectables in Australia can legally be administered by a range of practitioners, including medical doctors, registered nurses, dentists, and other authorised health professionals under prescribing arrangements. The TGA and AHPRA regulate the advertising, supply, and administration of the prescription medicines used in injectable treatment, but the specific clinical standards around training and oversight vary.
When choosing a clinic, practitioner qualifications and AHPRA registration status are the first things to verify. In Victoria, you can check a practitioner’s registration and any conditions on their registration at ahpra.gov.au. Registration confirms that the practitioner is currently registered, in good standing, and has met the relevant professional standards for their regulated health profession.
Beyond baseline registration, the relevant question for cosmetic injectables is what specific training and experience the practitioner has in this area. Cosmetic injectables are a speciality within the scope of practice of registered nurses and doctors; the general qualification does not absolute claim expertise in facial anatomy, injection technique, or aesthetic assessment. Asking about the practitioner’s training, experience, and ongoing professional development is a reasonable and appropriate question to ask before committing to treatment.
What a Good Consultation Should Include
The consultation is the most important indicator of how a clinic operates. A thorough consultation for injectable treatment should include: a medical history and contraindications review; a facial anatomy assessment that considers the whole face, not just the area of concern; a frank discussion of what is and is not achievable; disclosure of the risks specific to the treatment being considered; discussion of the products and doses proposed; and time for the client to ask questions and consider whether to proceed.
A consultation that skips directly to treatment without an adequate assessment is a concern regardless of the practitioner’s credentials. Similarly, a consultation in which the practitioner simply confirms what the client has requested without any clinical judgment or pushback is not a true clinical assessment, it is order taking. The value of a consultation is in the practitioner’s independent clinical input, not in confirmation of a pre formed plan.
At Core Aesthetics, the consultation is a separate appointment from treatment whenever this is practical for the client. The practitioner will conduct a facial assessment, discuss what is indicated and why, and explain what is not indicated and why. The client leaves the consultation with a clear understanding of the proposed treatment and a genuine opportunity to reflect before proceeding.
Questions to Ask Before Choosing a Clinic
When researching injectable clinics, a few targeted questions can help distinguish between clinics with a serious clinical approach and those operating primarily as commercial operations. Some useful questions to consider:
Does the clinic require a consultation before treatment, or can treatments be booked and performed at the same visit without prior assessment? A consultation based model indicates a more clinical approach; the ability to book treatment without any assessment indicates a more commercial one.
Does the practitioner have the capacity to say no, or to recommend less than the client is asking for? Practitioners who are willing to decline inappropriate requests, or who recommend conservative approaches over maximum treatment, are prioritising clinical judgment over revenue.
What is the review process? Is a follow up appointment included as a standard part of the treatment cycle, and does the practitioner proactively schedule this? The review appointment is a clinical standard, not an optional extra.
Is pricing transparent and based on clinical assessment, or are packages and promotions offered? Promotional pricing and bundles are inconsistent with AHPRA advertising guidelines for registered health practitioners in the cosmetic injectables space.
These are not trick questions, they are reasonable questions for any person considering a medical procedure to ask.
Understanding Pricing and What It Does and Does Not Tell You
Pricing for injectable treatments varies significantly across Melbourne’s injectable clinics. High price does not absolute claim high quality; low price does not absolute claim poor quality. What pricing can indicate, however, is the commercial model the clinic is operating under.
Clinics that offer reduced fee packages, promotional pricing, or treat injectables as a volume commodity are operating differently from clinics that base pricing on clinical assessment of what is individually appropriate. Both exist in the market; understanding which model you are choosing is relevant to the kind of experience you are likely to have.
At Core Aesthetics, pricing is based on the clinical assessment of what is appropriate for each individual, the dose, the areas treated, and the complexity involved. There are no packages, no promotions, and no time limited offers. The quote provided at consultation is based on what has been assessed as clinically indicated, not on a commercial structure. This is consistent with AHPRA advertising guidelines, which prohibit inducements, reduced fee offers, and promotional pricing for regulated health practitioners advertising cosmetic injectables.
Why Location Matters: Oakleigh and Melbourne’s South-East
Access to a trusted injectable clinic is most convenient when the clinic is genuinely local, close enough to attend consultations, review appointments, and treatment sessions without significant travel. For residents of Melbourne’s south east, including Carnegie, Murrumbeena, Bentleigh, McKinnon, Chadstone, Clayton, Mount Waverley, Glen Waverley, Cheltenham, Highett, and surrounding areas, Oakleigh provides a central location that is accessible by car and public transport.
Core Aesthetics is located at 12A Atherton Road, Oakleigh, a short distance from Oakleigh station and easily accessible from the Monash Freeway and Princes Highway catchments. For clients who have previously travelled to inner city clinics, the convenience of a local clinic with equivalent or superior clinical standards is significant, particularly when multiple appointments over a treatment cycle are considered.
The south east corridor has a substantial population of people who are appropriate candidates for injectable treatment, and who benefit from having access to a consultation based clinic close to home. Core Aesthetics was established to serve this community specifically, with a model that prioritises clinical quality and honest communication over volume and throughput.
What to Expect at Your First Appointment at Core Aesthetics
A first appointment at Core Aesthetics is a consultation, not a treatment. The practitioner. Corey Anderson, Registered Nurse, conducts a facial anatomy assessment, reviews the client’s medical history and any contraindications, discusses the specific concerns the client has raised, and explains what treatment is appropriate, what the process involves, and what the likely outcomes are.
The consultation is structured around the C.O.R.E. method. Consult, Organise, Refine, Evaluate, which forms the basis of the treatment relationship at the clinic. The initial consultation is the ‘Consult’ stage: it establishes the clinical picture and lays the groundwork for a treatment plan that is specific to the individual.
Clients are encouraged to bring any questions they have to the consultation and to take the time they need to make a decision about whether to proceed. There is no pressure to commit to treatment at the consultation appointment. The goal of the consultation is to inform, to give the client an accurate picture of what is available, what is appropriate for them specifically, and what the process involves, from which they can make their own informed decision.
Red Flags When Choosing a Cosmetic Injectable Clinic
While the previous sections have focused on positive indicators of a quality clinic, it is equally useful to be aware of red flags, signs that a clinic may not be operating to appropriate clinical standards.
Some signs to be cautious about: treatment offered without any prior assessment or consultation; practitioners whose qualifications or registration cannot be verified; before and after images used in advertising without clear patient consent information; endorsements or reviews explicitly promoting treatment outcomes (which are prohibited under AHPRA advertising guidelines for registered practitioners); promotional pricing, package deals, or time limited offers; claims about treatment results using absolute language ( certain, always, best); and pressure to book or commit to treatment during or immediately after an initial conversation.
These are not always signs of deliberate malpractice, some are simply signs of a commercial model that prioritises acquisition over clinical appropriateness. But they are worth knowing, because the choice of clinic and practitioner has real consequences for the safety and quality of the treatment you receive.
Booking a Consultation at Core Aesthetics Oakleigh
Booking a consultation at Core Aesthetics is straightforward. The online booking system allows clients to select a consultation appointment at a time that suits them. Consultations are available for new clients presenting with any concern related to cosmetic injectables, anti-wrinkle treatment, dermal filler, lip shaping, masseter treatment for jaw concerns, hyperhidrosis management, or general questions about whether injectable treatment is appropriate for them.
The consultation is the right first step regardless of whether you have had treatment before. For people who have had treatment elsewhere and are considering a change, the consultation provides an opportunity to discuss your history and what you are looking for differently. For people who have never had treatment, it is the place to understand whether treatment is appropriate, what the process involves, and what realistic outcomes look like for your specific anatomy and goals.
Core Aesthetics serves the south east Melbourne community from Oakleigh. Clients from Carnegie, Murrumbeena, Bentleigh, Clayton, Chadstone, Glen Waverley, Mount Waverley, Cheltenham, Highett, Moorabbin, Malvern East, and surrounding areas are welcome.
What to Read Before Booking: AHPRA Advertising Guidelines
Australia has specific advertising guidelines for registered health practitioners that regulate what can and cannot be said in clinic marketing, websites, and social media. The AHPRA advertising guidelines prohibit endorsements from patients about clinical services, before and after images used to promote treatment outcomes in certain contexts, promotional or reduced fee pricing, promises of results, and language that creates unrealistic expectations.
These guidelines exist to protect patients from misleading advertising in a medical context, where the power imbalance between a practitioner and a prospective patient is significant, and where the consequences of a poor treatment decision can be lasting.
Being aware of these guidelines gives you a useful filter when assessing clinic marketing. A clinic website that features patient endorsements about treatment outcomes, extensive before and after galleries used as selling tools, or promotional pricing is operating outside the guidelines that apply to registered practitioners. Core Aesthetics’ website and communications are designed to comply with AHPRA advertising requirements, information is factual, educational, and does not use patient voices or outcome imagery to promote commercial treatment uptake.
Clinical accountability and how this page is reviewed
The clinical content in “Choosing an Injectables Clinic in Oakleigh” is written and reviewed by Corey Anderson, AHPRA registered nurse (NMW0001047575). Core Aesthetics operates as a one practitioner, consultation based, low volume clinic in Oakleigh, Melbourne, which means every recommendation on this page reflects the same clinical perspective rather than a copywriter’s interpretation of it. Results vary between individuals, and any guidance written for the general reader has to acknowledge that variance, what the published evidence supports for the average patient may not be what the assessment supports for a specific patient.
Specific to choosing an oakleigh injectables clinic: this page describes the typical clinical picture for a healthy adult patient at the time of writing. Individual circumstances, medical history, current medications, prior cosmetic treatment, skin type, age, hormonal state, lifestyle, can shift any of the timelines and recommendations described here. The information is provided to help patients arrive at consultation already familiar with the underlying clinical reasoning, not to replace the consultation itself. Results vary between individuals; this page describes the centre of the distribution, not the edges. The cosmetic clinic near me south east Melbourne page covers an adjacent topic in more depth.
Patients reading this page who want to verify Corey Anderson’s AHPRA registration can do so directly on the AHPRA public register at ahpra.gov.au using registration number NMW0001047575. The Core Aesthetics clinic operates from 12A Atherton Road, Oakleigh VIC 3166, Tuesday to Saturday, by consultation appointment. All new patient treatment at Core Aesthetics follows a structured clinical consultation, consistent with the September 2025 AHPRA cosmetic procedures guidelines. Treatment may be scheduled for the same day as consultation or at a subsequent appointment, depending on clinical assessment and individual circumstances. Patients with questions about the content on this page can raise them at consultation; the practitioner is happy to walk through any clinical reasoning that the written content does not fully capture. Results vary between individuals, and the consultation is the appropriate place to discuss what those individual variations mean for a specific person’s treatment plan.
Is this for you?
Consider booking a consultation if
- You are 18 or older and in good general health
- You are researching cosmetic injectable treatments and want a clinical assessment of your options
- You prefer a one practitioner, consultation based environment
- You understand that treatment decisions are made individually, not based on a standard menu
This may not be for you if
- You are pregnant, trying to conceive, or breastfeeding
- You have an active skin infection or unhealed wound in a potential treatment area
- You are under 18 years of age
Suitability is confirmed at consultation. This list is general guidance, not a substitute for clinical assessment.
Frequently asked questions
What qualifications should I look for when choosing an injectable practitioner?
Look for current AHPRA registration (verifiable at ahpra.gov.au), specific training and experience in cosmetic injectables, a consultation based model, and a clear review process. The practitioner’s willingness to decline inappropriate requests or recommend less than you are asking for is also a positive indicator of clinical integrity.
Why does Core Aesthetics require a consultation before treatment?
The consultation is a clinical assessment, not a formality. It establishes your medical history, identifies any contraindications, assesses your facial anatomy, and determines what treatment is appropriate for your specific situation. Treatment without proper assessment risks both poor outcomes and safety issues.
Is Core Aesthetics near public transport?
Yes. Core Aesthetics is located at 12A Atherton Road, Oakleigh, a short distance from Oakleigh station on the Pakenham and Cranbourne lines. The clinic is also accessible by car with street parking available nearby.
Does Core Aesthetics offer package deals or promotional pricing?
No. Pricing at Core Aesthetics is based on clinical assessment of what is appropriate for each individual. There are no packages, promotions, or time limited offers. AHPRA advertising guidelines prohibit inducements and promotional pricing for registered health practitioners advertising cosmetic injectables.
Can I have treatment at my first appointment?
In many cases, yes, if the consultation confirms that treatment is appropriate and the client wishes to proceed, treatment can take place at the same appointment. However, for some presentations, particularly more complex anatomical situations, or where the client benefits from more time to consider, a separate treatment appointment is more appropriate.
What areas does Core Aesthetics serve?
Core Aesthetics is located in Oakleigh and serves clients from the south east Melbourne corridor, including Carnegie, Murrumbeena, Bentleigh, McKinnon, Clayton, Chadstone, Mount Waverley, Glen Waverley, Cheltenham, Highett, Moorabbin, Malvern East, and surrounding suburbs.
Who writes and reviews the clinical content on this page?
The clinical content is written and reviewed by Corey Anderson, an AHPRA registered nurse (NMW0001047575) and the practitioner at Core Aesthetics in Oakleigh, Melbourne. Core Aesthetics operates as a one practitioner, consultation based, low volume clinic, which means the recommendations on this page reflect the same clinical perspective patients encounter at the consultation itself. Results vary between individuals, and personalised guidance is provided at consultation.
Where is the clinic located?
Core Aesthetics is at 12A Atherton Road, Oakleigh VIC 3166. The clinic is reachable from across south east Melbourne, with parking on Atherton Road and surrounding streets. Oakleigh station is a short walk from the clinic on the Cranbourne and Pakenham lines.