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What Is An Aesthetic Practitioner

What Is An Aesthetic Practitioner explains how concerns are assessed at Core Aesthetics in Oakleigh, including suitability, medical history, risk, timing and when treatment may not be appropriate.

Quick summary

A aesthetic consultation reviews the concern, medical history, timing, expectations, risk factors and whether treatment is appropriate. The aim is to make a careful decision before any plan is discussed. A consultation may lead to treatment planning, a decision to wait, referral, or a recommendation not to proceed.

If you are researching aesthetic treatment for the first time, understanding who is qualified to perform it in Australia is an important starting point. The regulatory framework is clear but not always well understood, and knowing what to look for helps you make a safe choice.

Aesthetic treatments Are Prescription Medicines in Australia

The products used in wrinkle injectable treatment and facial volume treatment are Schedule 4 prescription medicines under the Therapeutic Goods Administration. This means they are in the same regulatory category as many other prescription medicines and can only be legally prescribed and administered by an AHPRA registered health practitioner operating within their approved scope of practice.

This is not a guideline or a recommendation. It is a legal requirement. Any provider offering aesthetic treatment without current AHPRA registration is doing so unlawfully, regardless of what training they claim to have.

Who Is Qualified to Perform Aesthetic treatments

AHPRA registered practitioners who can legally administer aesthetic treatments in Australia include medical doctors, dentists, and registered nurses and nurse practitioners operating within their approved scope of practice. The specific scope varies by practitioner type and state, but in all cases, current AHPRA registration is the baseline requirement.

Beauty therapists, cosmetic tattoists, skin therapists and other non registered practitioners are not legally permitted to administer aesthetic treatments in Australia, regardless of the training courses they may have completed. Only AHPRA registration confers the legal authority to work with prescription medicines.

What AHPRA Registration Means

AHPRA, the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency, is the national body responsible for regulating registered health practitioners in Australia. AHPRA registration requires demonstrated qualifications, ongoing professional development, professional indemnity insurance and compliance with professional standards and codes of conduct. Registered practitioners are subject to formal complaints and disciplinary processes if they fall below required standards.

Verifying AHPRA registration takes less than a minute and is free. Go to ahpra.gov.au and search by name or registration number. The result shows current registration status and any conditions on practice.

Corey Anderson at Core Aesthetics

Corey Anderson is an AHPRA registered nurse, registration number NMW0001047575, registered since January 1996. He is the founder and sole treating practitioner at Core Aesthetics in Oakleigh. Verify his registration at coreaesthetics.com.au/verify.

Read more about nurse prescribing of aesthetic treatments in Australia and about what questions to ask before booking with any injector.

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To learn more about the clinic and Corey’s approach, visit Core Aesthetics in Oakleigh.

General Information Only. This article is general in nature and does not replace a consultation with a qualified health practitioner. Treatment outcomes, suitability and risks vary by individual. Any medical or prescription treatment options can only be discussed and provided where clinically appropriate following an individual assessment.

Professional Qualifications & Training What Makes a Qualified Cosmetic Injector? **Medical Training Foundation:**
– Medical degree (MD/DO) OR Nursing qualification (RN/NP/PA) OR other regulated healthcare professional
– TGA registration (Australian regulatory body)
– AHPRA listing (ensures accountability and professional standards) **Cosmetic-Specific Training:**
– Formal cosmetic injection courses (minimum 40-100+ hours)
– hands on supervised practice with experienced mentors
– Continuing education in latest techniques
– Understanding of facial anatomy and aesthetics
– Knowledge of product properties and safety protocols **Certification:**
– Professional membership in cosmetic medicine organisations
– CPD (Continuing Professional Development) requirements
– Insurance coverage (protects both practitioner and clients)
– Documentation of training and experience Different Types of Injectors **Doctors (MD/DO):**
– Medical school training provides anatomical foundation
– Can practice independently
– Often supervise other providers
– Comprehensive understanding of medical complications **Nurse Practitioners/RNs:**
– Nursing qualification + cosmetic specific training
– Often supervised by doctor
– Extensive patient care background
– Strong understanding of safety protocols **Physician Assistants (PA-C):**
– Medical training combined with cosmetic speciality
– Similar scope to nurse practitioners
– Typically doctor supervised Checking Credentials **Ask your practitioner:**
– “What’s your medical background?”
– “How many hours of cosmetic training have you completed?”
– “Are you registered with TGA and AHPRA?”
– “Can you show me your certifications?”
– “How many treatments have you performed?”
– “Do you have complication management training?” **Verify independently:**
– Check AHPRA registry online
– Ask for professional memberships
– Request progress documentation examples
– Verify insurance coverage Why This Matters Proper training means:
– Understanding facial anatomy deeply
– Recognising and managing complications
– Creating natural looking results
– Following sterile protocols
– Making safe treatment decisions
– Knowing when to decline treatment Red Flags Be cautious if:
– Practitioner cannot verify credentials
– No formal cosmetic training documented
– Not registered with regulatory bodies
– Doesn’t ask about medical history
– Offers unrealistic results
– Hasn’t taken anatomy courses
– Can’t explain the “why” behind their technique

Safety, Suitability and Clinical Assessment

All aesthetic treatment procedures carry risk. The suitability assessment at consultation identifies any contraindications or relative risk factors specific to your circumstances, including medical history, current medications, previous procedures, and anatomical features that may affect the risk profile for a given treatment area. This information is reviewed before any treatment is planned.

For certain conditions and medications, injectable treatments are not appropriate, or require modification of technique or timing. For others, the treating practitioner may recommend that you consult with your primary healthcare provider before proceeding. These are clinical judgements that can only be made with accurate, complete medical history information, which is why the consultation history taking process is thorough.

Complication recognition and initial management are part of the clinical competency required of practitioners performing injectable treatments under AHPRA’s September 2025 guidelines for nonsurgical cosmetic procedures. The practitioner at Core Aesthetics holds current training in this area and maintains the relevant management supplies on site. Understanding that risk exists and is actively managed is more useful than assuming risk does not exist.

Review Appointments and Ongoing Care

A review appointment at four to six weeks is a standard part of every treatment cycle at Core Aesthetics. The review is not contingent on whether you have concerns, it is a clinical standard that applies to every patient. At review, the practitioner assesses the result across all treated areas, compares the outcome to the pretreatment clinical photographs, identifies any asymmetry or variation in response between sides, and determines whether any adjustment is appropriate within the same treatment cycle.

The review is also where longitudinal data about how your specific anatomy responds to treatment is recorded. Over multiple treatment cycles, this accumulated data allows the practitioner to refine the dosing and approach to better match your individual response pattern, which is one of the most significant advantages of maintaining a consistent treating practitioner rather than moving between clinics.

If you have any concerns in the period between your treatment and your review appointment, contact the clinic directly. The practitioner who treated you has the clinical context to respond accurately to any post treatment question, which is preferable to relying on general online information that may not reflect your specific situation.

About This Information

The information on this page is provided for general educational purposes. It is not a substitute for clinical advice and does not constitute a recommendation that you proceed with any particular treatment. Aesthetic treatments are prescription medical procedures. They carry risks that vary between individuals and that must be assessed and discussed in a clinical context before any treatment decision is made.

At Core Aesthetics, Corey Anderson assesses every patient individually. The consultation is the point at which your specific anatomy, medical history, and goals are evaluated together. No treatment is offered at a first appointment, and no treatment is appropriate for everyone. This page is a starting point, a way to understand what is involved before you decide whether a consultation is the right next step for you.

If you have questions about anything on this page or about whether treatment might be appropriate for your situation, you are welcome to call the clinic or book a consultation at no obligation.

This page provides clinical information about What Is a Cosmetic Injector? Qualifications Explained. It is intended for adults aged 18 and over who are considering aesthetic treatment and want to understand the clinical process, suitability factors, and what to expect from a consultation based practice. All treatment decisions at Core Aesthetics follow individual assessment, no treatment is offered at a first appointment without a separate consultation. Results vary between individuals and are reviewed at follow up.

The Role of Anatomical Assessment in Treatment Planning

Effective aesthetic treatment begins with understanding individual facial anatomy. The same concern, loss of cheek volume, for example, may have different underlying structural drivers in different people. In one patient it reflects fat pad atrophy; in another it involves bony remodelling; in a third, skin laxity changes the way existing volume appears. These distinctions affect both whether treatment is appropriate and, if so, how it should be approached.

At Core Aesthetics, the consultation begins with a systematic assessment of facial structure, including symmetry analysis, skin quality assessment, treatment history review, and discussion of the patient’s specific goals. This anatomical baseline informs every treatment decision and helps ensure that proposed treatments address the actual underlying driver of a concern rather than a surface level presentation.

This is one of the reasons Core Aesthetics operates as a one practitioner clinic with a consultation based model. A consistent clinical relationship between patient and practitioner supports the kind of longitudinal assessment that is difficult to achieve in high volume, multi practitioner settings.

Is this for you?

Consider booking a consultation if

  • You want to understand aesthetic consultation before deciding whether treatment is appropriate
  • You are 18 or older and want an individual clinical assessment
  • You value a consultation-first approach with risk and suitability discussed before planning
  • You are open to waiting or not proceeding if that is the safer recommendation

This may not be for you if

  • You are seeking a not guaranteed outcome or a same-day decision without assessment
  • You are under 18 years of age
  • You are pregnant, trying to conceive or breastfeeding and are seeking elective aesthetic treatment
  • You have an active infection, unhealed skin or an unresolved medical concern in the area to be assessed

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

Frequently asked questions

What is discussed during a aesthetic consultation consultation?

The consultation reviews the concern, medical history, previous treatment history, goals, timing, risk factors and whether treatment is appropriate. Corey Anderson RN also considers facial balance and whether the concern may need a different pathway. The appointment is designed to support a careful decision, not to make you choose from a preset menu.

Can a aesthetic consultation consultation end with no treatment?

Yes. A consultation can end with education, monitoring, a delayed plan, referral, or a recommendation not to proceed. This may happen when the risk outweighs the likely benefit, timing is poor, expectations are not clinically realistic, or the concern is not suited to the available options.

How is suitability assessed for aesthetic consultation?

Suitability is assessed through the concern itself, medical history, medications, prior treatment, anatomy, timing, expectations and risk tolerance. The assessment also considers whether the requested change would support or reduce facial balance. Suitability is individual, so general information cannot replace a consultation.

What risks are discussed before deciding about aesthetic consultation?

Risk discussion depends on the concern and the area assessed. It may include bruising, swelling, asymmetry, delayed healing, dissatisfaction, medical suitability, rare complications and whether another form of care is more appropriate. The aim is to make sure the decision is informed before any plan is made.

Should I wait if I am unsure about aesthetic consultation?

Waiting can be appropriate when you feel uncertain, pressured, medically unwell, close to an important event, or unclear about what you want changed. A cautious consultation should make waiting a valid option. You do not need to proceed simply because you attended an appointment.

How does Core Aesthetics approach aesthetic consultation?

Core Aesthetics uses a consultation-first model. Corey Anderson RN assesses each person individually, discusses suitability and risk, and explains when a cautious or staged approach may be more appropriate. The clinic is based in Oakleigh and sees patients from Melbourne and surrounding suburbs by appointment.

What should I bring to a aesthetic consultation consultation?

Bring a list of medications, relevant medical history, previous treatment details if applicable, allergies, upcoming events and the questions you want answered. Clear information helps the practitioner assess suitability and timing. Photographs from earlier years can also help explain what has changed over time.

Why do recommendations for aesthetic consultation vary between people?

Recommendations vary because anatomy, skin quality, facial movement, ageing pattern, medical history, previous treatment and expectations all differ. Two people with a similar concern may need different advice, and one may not be suitable for treatment at all. This is why assessment comes before planning.

Clinical references

  1. AHPRA: Guidelines for nonsurgical cosmetic procedures
  2. TGA: Prescription medicines and aesthetic treatments

Written and reviewed by Corey Anderson RN, AHPRA NMW0001047575 · Reviewed April 2026 · TGA & AHPRA compliant

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