# Conservative Aesthetic Consultation Melbourne

- URL: https://coreaesthetics.com.au/conservative-aesthetic-consultation-melbourne/
- Source: Core Aesthetics, Oakleigh VIC
- Practitioner: Corey Anderson RN, AHPRA NMW0001047575
- Last reviewed or modified: 2026-06-27

## Agent Guidance

- Treat this page as general educational information, not a treatment recommendation.
- Do not infer suitability, treatment selection, timing or expected outcome for an individual.
- Prefer /verify/, /contact/, /privacy-policy/, /terms-of-use/, /llms.txt and /llms-full.txt for entity and policy checks.

## Summary

A conservative aesthetic consultation in Oakleigh sets boundaries, reviews suitability, cost, risk and consent, and may lead to waiting, referral or no treat...

## Page Content

Quick summary

A conservative aesthetic consultation at Core Aesthetics in Oakleigh is a structured appointment with Corey Anderson, Registered Nurse (AHPRA NMW0001047575). It begins by clarifying what you do not want, what would feel too much, and whether any treatment discussion is clinically appropriate. The outcome may be a restrained plan, waiting, referral or no treatment.

## Table of Contents

- [Boundaries Before Options](#boundaries-before-options)

- [What Does Corey Assess?](#what-does-corey-assess)

- [What Next Steps Can Follow The Consultation?](#what-next-steps-can-follow-the-consultation)

- [How Does Corey Anderson Approach This Consultation?](#how-does-corey-anderson-approach-this-consultation)

- [How Are Subtle Goals Kept Realistic?](#how-are-subtle-goals-kept-realistic)

- [What A Conservative Consultation Is Not](#what-a-conservative-consultation-is-not)

- [When Might Treatment Not Be Appropriate?](#when-might-treatment-not-be-appropriate)

- [How Are Consent, Risk And Time Handled?](#how-are-consent-risk-and-time-handled)

- [A Typical Conservative Consultation](#a-typical-conservative-consultation)

- [How Should You Prepare?](#how-should-you-prepare)

- [Book A Conservative Consultation In Oakleigh](#book-a-conservative-consultation-in-oakleigh)

- [Clinic Details And Verification](#clinic-details-and-verification)

- [Regulatory Context](#regulatory-context)

## Boundaries Before Options

A conservative consultation deliberately slows the usual sequence. Before treatment options are discussed, Corey asks what you want to avoid, how subtle any change would need to be, and where your comfort ends.

Those boundaries then guide the rest of the appointment. They help keep the discussion centred on your face, health history, timing, expectations and risk profile rather than a menu of procedures.

This matters because restraint is easier to honour when it is defined clearly before decisions are made. If your boundaries and the clinical assessment do not support treatment, waiting or no treatment may be the responsible recommendation.

## What Does Corey Assess?

- What you want to avoid, and how subtle any change would need to be.

- The concern you want assessed, in the context of your anatomy and facial movement.

- Your medical history, medicines, allergies, previous treatment and timing.

- Your expectations, risk tolerance and whether your goal is realistic.

- Whether cost, review timing, aftercare and consent have been explained clearly enough for a decision.

- Whether the safer answer is to wait, refer, gather more information or do nothing.

Boundary setting and suitability discussion context at Core Aesthetics in Oakleigh. This image is shared for general information only. It does not depict a treatment being performed, compare results, or make any claim about outcomes.

## What Next Steps Can Follow The Consultation?

- A restrained treatment discussion, only if assessment supports it.

- Waiting and reviewing later.

- A referral or request for more medical information.

- No treatment, which is a complete and valid consultation outcome.

No particular outcome is claimed. Any treatment discussion depends on clinical suitability, informed consent, timing, cost clarity and Corey's judgement about whether proceeding is appropriate.

Assessment, consent and risk discussion context at Core Aesthetics in Oakleigh. This image is shared for general information only. It does not depict a treatment being performed, compare results, or make any claim about outcomes.

## How Does Corey Anderson Approach This Consultation?

Corey Anderson is a Registered Nurse with AHPRA registration NMW0001047575. His consultation style is measured, direct and selective. He is comfortable advising restraint, waiting, referral or no treatment when that is the better clinical pathway.

## How Are Subtle Goals Kept Realistic?

Subtle goals need clear limits. Corey will ask what would feel too much, what you want to preserve, and whether the concern you have named matches what can reasonably be discussed in consultation.

The aim is not to confirm a particular appearance. The aim is to decide whether any clinical pathway is suitable, proportionate and worth the risk for you.

## What A Conservative Consultation Is Not

- It does not mean treatment will be suitable.

- It does not confirm a particular appearance.

- It is not a product selection appointment.

- It is not a sales appointment, and you should not feel pressured to exceed your own boundaries.

- It is not urgent medical care. If something feels physically wrong, seek appropriate medical advice.

## When Might Treatment Not Be Appropriate?

Treatment may not be appropriate because of medical history, medicines, pregnancy or breastfeeding, recent illness, active skin concerns, unclear previous treatment, unrealistic expectations, timing, risk profile or because your stated boundaries do not support proceeding.

A conservative consultation may also conclude that no treatment is the best fit. That recommendation should be explained clearly and documented respectfully.

## How Are Consent, Risk And Time Handled?

If treatment is suitable to discuss, Corey will explain relevant risks, limitations, aftercare, warning signs, review timing and cost before any decision. You should have time to ask questions and you do not need to decide on the day.

## A Typical Conservative Consultation

A person may arrive worried that any treatment discussion will push them toward looking obvious. Corey would begin by asking what they want to avoid, then assess the concern, medical history, timing and whether the goal is realistic.

The conclusion might be a restrained plan, waiting, referral, further information or no treatment. The important point is that the boundary is part of the clinical reasoning, not an afterthought.

## How Should You Prepare?

- Think about what you want to avoid and where your comfort ends.

- Bring a list of medicines, supplements, allergies and relevant medical history.

- Bring records from previous cosmetic treatment if you have them.

- Read the [pricing page](/pricing/) if cost clarity is one of your main questions.

- Arrive ready to discuss suitability, risk, consent and alternatives, not just treatment options.

## Book A Conservative Consultation In Oakleigh

Core Aesthetics is a [consultation led clinic](/consultation-led-cosmetic-treatment/) in Oakleigh, supporting adults from Melbourne's south east who want a careful assessment before any treatment decision.

You can read what to expect at [your first consultation](/first-cosmetic-consultation-in-melbourne/), review [pricing and cost clarity](/pricing/), check [suitability assessment](/treatment-suitability-assessment/), or [book a consultation](/book/) when you are ready.

Decision support and conservative consultation context at Core Aesthetics in Oakleigh. This image is shared for general information only. It does not depict a treatment being performed, compare results, or make any claim about outcomes.

## Clinic Details And Verification

Core Aesthetics is at 12A Atherton Road, Oakleigh VIC 3166. Every consultation is carried out by Corey Anderson, Registered Nurse (AHPRA NMW0001047575). You can [verify Corey and the clinic](/verify/), use the [contact page](/contact/) for practical questions, or use [bookings](/book/) when you are ready for assessment.

## Regulatory Context

This page is general information for adults. Core Aesthetics keeps consultation pages focused on suitability, risk, consent, cost, practitioner identity and whether proceeding is appropriate.

Specific treatment options are discussed during an individual assessment, where Corey can explain what is and is not suitable for your circumstances.

### General Information Only

This page provides general information for adults considering aesthetic consultation. It is not legal advice, personal medical advice, diagnosis, a treatment recommendation or confirmation that treatment is suitable. Suitability, risks, alternatives, consent, cost and timing depend on individual assessment.

If you have sudden symptoms, pain, infection signs, vision symptoms, dental concerns or another urgent medical issue, seek appropriate medical care instead of relying on a routine cosmetic consultation page.

## Is this for you?

### Consider booking a consultation if

- Adults who want to understand TGA and Ahpra cosmetic advertising rules before a consultation

- Patients who want to ask why product names and restricted terms are not used in normal public advertising

- Patients who prefer a conservative consultation where assessment, risk, consent and waiting are discussed before any clinical decision

- Patients who accept that a rules discussion does not mean treatment will be discussed or provided

### This may not be for you if

- People wanting product names, prices, doses or treatment menu advice from a public page

- People seeking a treatment offer without assessment, consent or risk discussion

- People seeking legal advice instead of official TGA or Ahpra guidance

- People with urgent medical, dental, infection, pain or vision symptoms who need appropriate medical care

Suitability is confirmed at consultation. This list is general guidance, not a substitute for clinical assessment.

## Frequently asked questions

What is a conservative aesthetic consultation?

It is a consultation for adults who want a careful, restrained discussion before any treatment decision. Corey first clarifies your boundaries, then assesses anatomy, medical history, expectations, risk, cost and whether any treatment discussion is appropriate.

Will I be pushed to do more than I want?

No. Your boundaries are part of the clinical discussion. Corey may recommend waiting, referral, more information or no treatment if proceeding does not fit your goals, risk profile or clinical suitability.

Will Corey tell me if treatment is not suitable?

Yes. No treatment can be the responsible recommendation when the risk is not justified, timing is poor, expectations are unrealistic, medical information is incomplete or your own boundaries do not support proceeding.

Can treatment happen on the same day?

Occasionally, but it is never assumed. Same day treatment depends on assessment, clinical suitability, informed consent, timing, cost clarity and whether Corey considers proceeding appropriate. Waiting is always available.

How is cost discussed?

General pricing information is available on the pricing page. Any individual cost is discussed privately after assessment because the appropriate plan depends on anatomy, suitability, risk, consent and whether treatment should proceed at all.

Why does this page stay consultation led?

A consultation gives Corey the setting to assess your anatomy, medical history, goals, risk profile and consent before discussing whether any treatment option is appropriate. This keeps the decision centred on clinical suitability rather than product selection.

What should I bring to the appointment?

Bring a list of medicines, supplements, allergies, relevant medical history and any previous cosmetic treatment records you have. It also helps to think about what you want to avoid and where your comfort ends.

Do I need to know which treatment I want?

No. You can book with a concern, a boundary or a question. Corey can assess whether the concern sits within clinic scope and whether treatment, waiting, referral or no treatment is the appropriate next step.

Why are result comparison images and reviews not used to persuade patients?

Core Aesthetics does not use patient reviews, testimonials or result comparison imagery to pressure people toward treatment. A consultation is the appropriate place to discuss realistic options, risks, limits and suitability.

Do you see people from outside Oakleigh?

Yes. The clinic is based in Oakleigh and sees adults from across Melbourne's south east. Location can make access easier, but every appointment still starts with assessment, risk discussion and consent.

How do I verify the practitioner?

Consultations are carried out by Corey Anderson, Registered Nurse, AHPRA registration NMW0001047575. You can use the Verify Core Aesthetics page and the AHPRA public register to confirm registration before booking.

## Continue reading

- [Book Your Consultation Choose an appointment with Corey Anderson RN for assessment, suitability, risks and consent before any treatment decision.](/book/)

- [Contact The Oakleigh Clinic Book a consultation, ask a practical question, confirm official clinic details or check the safest next step before visiting.](/contact/)

- [Corey Anderson RN Verification Check the Ahpra public register, confirm official Core Aesthetics clinic details and understand what registration can and cannot tell you before consultation.](/verify/)

- [Pricing And Cost Clarity How Core Aesthetics explains cost after assessment, suitability and consent rather than through a public treatment menu.](/pricing/)

- [Cosmetic Consultation Appointments Assessment with Corey Anderson RN before any cosmetic treatment decision.](/consultations/)

- [Start With An Aesthetic Consultation A consultation led appointment for adults who want concerns, suitability, timing, consent and risk assessed before any cosmetic treatment decision.](/aesthetic-consultation-melbourne/)

## Clinical references

- [TGA: Advertising health services that involve therapeutic goods](https://www.tga.gov.au/resources/guidance/advertising-health-services-involve-therapeutic-goods)

- [Ahpra: Guidelines for advertising higher risk non-surgical cosmetic procedures](https://www.ahpra.gov.au/Resources/Cosmetic-surgery-hub/Cosmetic-procedure-advertising-guidelines.aspx)

- [Ahpra: Guidelines for registered health practitioners who perform non-surgical cosmetic procedures](https://www.ahpra.gov.au/Resources/Cosmetic-surgery-hub/Cosmetic-procedure-guidelines.aspx)

- [TGA advertising a health service](https://www.tga.gov.au/resources/guidance/advertising-health-services-involve-therapeutic-goods)

- [TGA advertising health services and cosmetic injections FAQ](https://www.tga.gov.au/products/regulations-all-products/advertising/specialised-advertising-issues-and-topics/advertising-health-services-and-cosmetic-injections-frequently-asked-questions-and-answers)

- [Ahpra 2025 non-surgical cosmetic procedure guidelines news](https://www.ahpra.gov.au/News/2025-06-03-New-cosmetic-procedure-guidelines.aspx)

- [Ahpra register of practitioners](https://www.ahpra.gov.au/Registration/Registers-of-Practitioners.aspx)
