# One practitioner, every appointment. - URL: https://coreaesthetics.com.au/ - Source: Core Aesthetics, Oakleigh VIC - Practitioner: Corey Anderson RN, AHPRA NMW0001047575 - Last reviewed or modified: 2026-05-21 ## 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 Core Aesthetics in Oakleigh offers consultation led cosmetic treatment planning with Corey Anderson RN, focused on suitability, risk and restraint. ## Page Content Quick summary Core Aesthetics is a clinic that leads with consultation and keeps patient numbers deliberately low. Every assessment, any treatment planning and every review appointment is carried out by Corey Anderson, Registered Nurse, AHPRA NMW0001047575. No rotating practitioners, no treatment plans written by someone you never meet. ## Official Clinic Details And Consultation Pathway Core Aesthetics is based in Oakleigh and led by Corey Anderson RN. The clinic model is intentionally simple: one registered nurse conducts consultation, assessment, documentation, any treatment planning that is suitable, and review. Clinic Core Aesthetics. Practitioner Corey Anderson RN. Ahpra registration NMW0001047575. Address 12A Atherton Road, Oakleigh VIC 3166. Consultation pathway Assessment, suitability, risk discussion, consent and then a decision about treatment, waiting, referral or no treatment. ## What Happens First At Core Aesthetics? The first step is not choosing a treatment name. Corey starts by asking what has changed, what concerns you, what you hope to understand and what would make a plan unsuitable. Medical history, medicines, skin condition, previous cosmetic care, timing and expectations all matter. The consultation can lead to treatment planning when appropriate, but it can also lead to waiting, review, referral, skin care discussion or no treatment. That boundary is part of the clinic model. ## What Corey Assesses Assessment looks at the visible concern in context. A line, fold, shadow, volume change, lip concern, sweating concern or skin quality issue may be influenced by anatomy, movement, health history, timing, previous treatment or risk tolerance. Assessment area Why it matters Anatomy and proportion The same visible concern can have different causes in different people. Medical history Health, medicines, pregnancy, breastfeeding, allergies and recent procedures may change suitability. Expectations A safe consultation should identify goals that cannot responsibly be promised. Timing and consent Pressure from an event, uncertainty or missing information can make waiting safer. Review pathway Patients should know how concerns are handled after an appointment. ## Why The C. O. R. E. Method Matters The C. O. R. E. Method gives the homepage a clear clinical structure: consult, organise, refine and evaluate. It is not a slogan for a promised appearance. It describes how Corey approaches assessment, planning and review in a consistent way. This structure supports restraint. It keeps the conversation focused on the person in front of Corey, the reason for any recommendation and whether the safest answer may be to delay or decline treatment. ## When Treatment May Not Proceed No treatment may be recommended when risk outweighs likely benefit, expectations are not aligned with realistic limits, the concern is outside clinic scope, timing is poor, the patient feels pressured or a medical review is more appropriate. This is not a failure of consultation. It is one of the signs that the appointment is being treated as a health decision rather than a sales process. ## How Safety And Regulation Shape The Site Core Aesthetics avoids public product and brand promotion, certain appearance claims, patient anecdotes used as advertising proof and pressure based offers. Public pages are written around assessment, suitability, consent, risk and individual variation. That means some wording is deliberately restrained. The aim is to help adults understand how consultation works without turning public information into a treatment recommendation. Corey Anderson RN at Core Aesthetics in Oakleigh. The same registered nurse provides consultation, planning where appropriate and review. ## Useful Starting Points If you are unsure where to begin, start with [consultation led cosmetic treatment](/consultation-led-cosmetic-treatment/), [aesthetic consultation Melbourne](/aesthetic-consultation-melbourne/) and [the consultation guide](/consultation-guide-melbourne/). These pages explain the decision process before focusing on one area of the face. If trust and safety are your main concern, read [verify Corey and clinic details](/verify/), [patient safety in aesthetic consultation](/patient-safety-aesthetic-consultation/) and [treatment suitability assessment](/treatment-suitability-assessment/). ## How To Use The Homepage The homepage is designed as a triage point for adults who need orientation before choosing a more specific page. The official details section confirms the clinic, practitioner, Ahpra number and Oakleigh address. The C. O. R. E. Method section explains how Corey structures assessment, planning and review. The treatment links are starting points only; they do not replace consultation or decide suitability. If you are checking accountability, use the practitioner section and verification page before booking. If you are comparing the appointment process, use the visit pathway and first consultation guide. If you want broader education, use the journal links and safety pages. This structure helps the homepage pass authority to the right hub without turning the first page into a crowded treatment menu. It also gives cautious patients a direct route to booking once their questions are answered. ## How To Choose Your Starting Point Many people arrive at the homepage because they know something has changed, but they do not know which page or appointment type fits. That uncertainty is normal. The safer starting point is to name the concern and let consultation decide whether the concern is mainly movement related, structural, skin related, timing related or not suitable for cosmetic treatment. What you are trying to clarify Useful starting page Why it helps You are unsure where to begin. [Consultation led cosmetic treatment](/consultation-led-cosmetic-treatment/). Explains how assessment comes before choosing a treatment pathway. You are planning a first appointment. [First cosmetic consultation](/first-cosmetic-consultation-in-melbourne/). Explains what to bring, what consent means and how same day decisions are handled. You are checking practitioner accountability. [Verify Corey and clinic details](/verify/). Gives the Ahpra registration number, official clinic details and public correction reference. You are weighing risk or suitability. [Treatment suitability assessment](/treatment-suitability-assessment/). Shows why medical history, timing, expectations and risk can change the recommendation. You are comparing local access. [Areas we service](/areas-we-service/). Connects Oakleigh with nearby Melbourne consultation catchments. ## Why The Single Practitioner Model Matters The same practitioner model is a trust signal because the person who hears the concern also performs the assessment, documents the plan and reviews the patient. There is no separate sales consultation handed to a different treating person. That makes it easier for patients to ask who is accountable for the decision. It also means the recommendation can stay consistent across appointments. Corey can compare the current concern with previous notes, prior treatment history where relevant, patient preferences and how cautious the plan should be. Continuity does not promise a particular appearance, but it supports clearer clinical reasoning. ## What The Homepage Should Not Promise The homepage should not promise a particular appearance, a fixed duration, a specific treatment on the day or an assessment that can be made without seeing the patient. It should also avoid public prescription product promotion, pressure based offers and patient anecdotes used as proof. This is why the homepage points toward consultation, verification, suitability, risk discussion, consent and review. Those signals may feel less dramatic than a treatment menu, but they are more useful for a cautious adult deciding whether to book. ## Local Consultation Access The Oakleigh clinic is a practical consultation point for patients from nearby Melbourne areas including the south east, Bayside and the inner east. Local access does not change the clinical threshold: suitability, consent and risk discussion still come before any treatment decision. Use [areas we service](/areas-we-service/), [South East consultation](/south-east-aesthetic-consultation/), [Bayside consultation](/bayside-aesthetic-consultation/) and [Inner East consultation](/inner-east-aesthetic-consultation/) if you are looking for the closest starting point. ## Book A Consultation If you want to discuss a concern with Corey, use the booking pathway or contact the clinic. Booking creates time for assessment and questions. It does not mean treatment will proceed. Bring a clear health history, current medicines and supplements, previous cosmetic treatment details where relevant, allergy information and the questions you want answered before deciding. ## Is this for you? ### Consider booking a consultation if - You want consultation before deciding whether cosmetic treatment is appropriate - You value assessment, risk discussion, consent and conservative planning - You are 18 or older and want individual clinical assessment - You are open to waiting, referral or no treatment if that is the safer recommendation ### This may not be for you if - You want a predetermined treatment decision without assessment - You are seeking a specific promised appearance - You are pregnant, trying to conceive or breastfeeding and are seeking elective cosmetic treatment - You have an active infection, unhealed skin or unresolved medical concern that needs medical review first Suitability is confirmed at consultation. This list is general guidance, not a substitute for clinical assessment. ## Frequently asked questions Where is Core Aesthetics located? Core Aesthetics is based in Oakleigh and supports adults from Melbourne, the south east, Bayside and the inner east. The location is only part of the decision. Consultation still determines whether the concern is suitable for assessment, treatment planning, waiting, referral or no treatment. What happens at a Core Aesthetics consultation? Corey reviews the concern, medical history, medicines, previous treatment, expectations, timing and relevant risks. The consultation also considers whether treatment is suitable, whether more information is needed, whether waiting or referral is safer, or whether no treatment is the right answer. Can treatment happen on the same day? Some adults may be suitable for treatment on the same day as consultation, but only after assessment, informed consent and Corey deciding that proceeding is clinically appropriate. If timing, health history, expectations, consent or risk do not support treatment, waiting is appropriate. Can Corey recommend no treatment? Yes. No treatment may be the responsible recommendation if the concern is outside scope, expectations are unrealistic, risk is not justified, the timing is unsuitable or medical review is needed first. A careful consultation should make that option clear. Does the website list product names? No. Core Aesthetics avoids product and brand promotion in public website copy. The site is written around consultation, suitability, consent, risk discussion and clinical decision making, which keeps the advertising focus on health service information rather than product led claims. What should I bring to my appointment? Bring a clear health history, current medicines and supplements, allergy information, previous treatment details, relevant skin concerns and questions about risks, suitability and timing. If you are unwell, have an active skin concern or have had a recent procedure, contact the clinic before assuming treatment can proceed. Who performs consultations at Core Aesthetics? Consultations are led by Corey Anderson RN, registered nurse and practitioner at Core Aesthetics. Patients can check Ahpra registration details before booking, ask questions about suitability and consent, and understand that treatment planning depends on individual assessment. How do I book? Use the booking pathway or contact the clinic if you want to discuss whether consultation is appropriate. Booking creates time for assessment, questions and informed consent discussion. It does not mean treatment will proceed, and Corey may recommend waiting, referral or no treatment. ## Continue reading - [About Core Aesthetics Learn who leads the Oakleigh clinic, how consultation decisions are made, and how suitability, consent, safety boundaries and follow up are handled.](/about/) - [Corey Anderson RN Corey is the sole practitioner at Core Aesthetics in Oakleigh, where consultation, suitability, consent and clinical judgement guide each treatment decision.](/team/) - [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/) - [Contact The Oakleigh Clinic Book a consultation, ask a practical question, confirm official clinic details or check the safest next step before visiting.](/contact/) - [Book Your Consultation Choose an appointment with Corey Anderson RN for assessment, suitability, risks and consent before any treatment decision.](/book/) - [Pricing And Cost Clarity How Core Aesthetics explains cost after assessment, suitability and consent rather than through a public treatment menu.](/pricing/) ## Clinical references - [Ahpra resources for non-surgical cosmetic procedure guidelines](https://www.ahpra.gov.au/Resources/Cosmetic-surgery-hub/Cosmetic-procedure-guidelines/Resources-for-performing-non-surgical-cosmetic-procedures.aspx) - [Ahpra cosmetic procedure advertising guidelines](https://www.ahpra.gov.au/Resources/Cosmetic-surgery-hub/Cosmetic-procedure-advertising-guidelines.aspx) - [Ahpra public register](https://www.ahpra.gov.au/Registration/Registers-of-Practitioners.aspx) - [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) - [TGA advertising code guidance](https://www.tga.gov.au/products/regulations-all-products/advertising/applying-advertising-code)