# When Waiting Is The Safer Consultation Outcome

- URL: https://coreaesthetics.com.au/when-to-wait-aesthetic-consultation/
- Source: Core Aesthetics, Oakleigh VIC
- Practitioner: Corey Anderson RN, AHPRA NMW0001047575
- Last reviewed or modified: 2026-06-12

## 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

Learn when waiting, medical review or no treatment may be safer before aesthetic treatment planning, with suitability and consent first.

## Page Content

Quick summary

It may be better to wait before aesthetic treatment planning if you are unwell, have irritated or broken skin, have active infection, are healing from dental or medical care, are pregnant or breastfeeding, feel pressured, have unresolved prior treatment concerns or cannot make a calm voluntary decision.

## Table of Contents

- [When Might Waiting Be Safer?](#when-might-waiting-be-safer)

- [How Should Waiting Be Explained?](#how-should-waiting-be-explained)

- [Can Same Day Treatment Still Be Discussed?](#can-same-day-treatment-still-be-discussed)

- [How Are Verification And Consent Handled?](#how-are-verification-and-consent-handled)

- [Which Pages Help Before Booking?](#which-pages-help-before-booking)

- [General Information Only](#general-information-only)

Aftercare and review consultation context for consultation planning at Core Aesthetics in Oakleigh. Illustrative consultation or assessment image only. Individual anatomy, suitability and treatment response vary. Not a treatment result or before-and-after image.

## When Might Waiting Be Safer?

Situation
What Corey checks
Why it matters

Health or symptoms
Illness, infection, fever, unexplained swelling, dental symptoms or medical review needs.
Medical or dental care may need to come first.

Skin or healing
Broken, inflamed, sunburnt, irritated or recently treated skin.
Assessment and timing may be less reliable until the skin settles.

Life context
Grief, separation, social pressure, event urgency or sudden emotional distress.
Consent may be clearer after more time.

Prior treatment concerns
Treatment still settling, unexpected symptoms or incomplete records.
Review should come before adding another plan.

## How Should Waiting Be Explained?

If Corey recommends waiting, the reason should be clear. It may relate to health, skin, timing, emotional readiness, previous treatment, missing records, referral, pregnancy, breastfeeding or consent. The patient should understand what needs to settle, what information is needed and when reassessment may make sense.

Waiting is different from no treatment. Waiting means the timing is not right now. No treatment means the assessment does not support cosmetic treatment for the concern. Both can be respectful and clinically useful outcomes.

Aftercare and review consultation context for consultation planning at Core Aesthetics in Oakleigh. Illustrative consultation or assessment image only. Individual anatomy, suitability and treatment response vary. Not a treatment result or before-and-after image.

## Can Same Day Treatment Still Be Discussed?

Core Aesthetics is consultation led, not treatment avoidant. Some adult patients may be suitable for treatment on the same day as consultation, but only after assessment, consent and timing support proceeding. If any waiting factor is important, same day treatment should not be treated as the default.

## How Are Verification And Consent Handled?

Corey Anderson RN is a Registered Nurse with Ahpra registration NMW0001047575. Patients can use the [Verify Core Aesthetics](/verify/) page, the Ahpra public register and clinic contact details before booking. Verification helps confirm who is accountable for assessment, consent, review and the recommendation to proceed, wait, refer or not treat.

Aftercare and review consultation context for review and planning discussion at Core Aesthetics in Oakleigh. Illustrative consultation or assessment image only. Individual anatomy, suitability and treatment response vary. Not a treatment result or before-and-after image.

## Which Pages Help Before Booking?

Useful supporting pages include [consultations](/consultations/), [aesthetic consultation melbourne](/aesthetic-consultation-melbourne/), [consultation guide melbourne](/consultation-guide-melbourne/), [skin quality before aesthetic consultation](/skin-quality-before-aesthetic-consultation/), [treatment suitability assessment](/treatment-suitability-assessment/), [how informed consent works aesthetic consultation](/how-informed-consent-works-aesthetic-consultation/), [patient safety aesthetic consultation](/patient-safety-aesthetic-consultation/), [why a practitioner may recommend no treatment](/why-a-practitioner-may-recommend-no-treatment/), [aesthetic consultation pregnancy breastfeeding](/aesthetic-consultation-pregnancy-breastfeeding/) and the [contact page](/contact/).

## General Information Only

This page was reviewed on 12 June 2026. It provides general education for adults considering aesthetic consultation. It is not medical, dental, psychological or crisis advice and it does not recommend a specific treatment. Personal advice depends on individual assessment and clinical judgement.

## Is this for you?

### Consider booking a consultation if

- Adults considering aesthetic consultation who want to understand when waiting may be safer

- Patients with timing, skin, medical history, pregnancy, breastfeeding or prior treatment questions

- People who want an honest assessment before deciding whether treatment should be discussed

- Patients open to waiting, referral, medical review or no treatment if that is the appropriate recommendation

### This may not be for you if

- People seeking a promised outcome or treatment decision before assessment

- People seeking cosmetic treatment for a person who is not an adult

- People with urgent medical symptoms that need immediate medical care rather than cosmetic consultation

- People who do not want to discuss risks, consent, alternatives or the possibility of waiting

- People seeking elective cosmetic treatment while pregnant, trying to conceive or breastfeeding without individual clinical advice

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

## Frequently asked questions

When should I wait before aesthetic treatment planning?

It may be better to wait if you are unwell, have active infection, irritated or broken skin, recent dental or medical care, unresolved prior treatment concerns, pregnancy or breastfeeding, external pressure or uncertainty about the decision.

Can I still attend consultation if treatment should wait?

Yes. Consultation can still help clarify the concern, explain risks, identify what needs review and decide when reassessment may be appropriate. Booking consultation does not mean treatment must occur.

Will Corey tell me if waiting is safer?

Yes. If waiting, referral or no treatment is the more appropriate recommendation, Corey should explain why and what would need to change before treatment is reconsidered.

Should I wait if I have irritated skin?

Possibly. Irritated, inflamed, broken, sunburnt or infected skin can affect assessment and timing. Some skin concerns should be reviewed by an appropriate medical practitioner before cosmetic planning.

Should I wait after dental work or surgery?

Recent dental work, surgery or medical care can affect timing, healing and risk assessment. Tell Corey what happened and when. The recommendation may be to wait until the area and your general health are settled.

Can treatment happen on the same day as consultation?

Sometimes, but it is not assumed. Same day treatment depends on assessment, consent, timing, skin condition, expectations and whether Corey determines proceeding is clinically appropriate.

Is waiting the same as being rejected for treatment?

No. Waiting usually means the timing or information is not right today. No treatment means the assessment does not support cosmetic treatment for the concern. Both should be explained respectfully.

What should I bring if I think I may need to wait?

Bring medicine details, relevant medical history, prior treatment dates, recent care details, photos if the concern has changed and any questions you want answered. Good information makes the recommendation clearer.

## Continue reading

- [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/)

- [Consultation Guide For Aesthetic Treatment Decisions A practical consultation guide for adults who want assessment, suitability, risks, timing and consent clarified before any cosmetic treatment decision.](/consultation-guide-melbourne/)

- [Skin Quality Before An Aesthetic Consultation Skin quality matters before aesthetic consultation because irritation, inflammation, broken skin, sunburn, recent skin procedures, active skincare and makeup can affect assessment visibility, comfort, timing and suitability. Corey Anderson RN checks whether cosmetic treatment discussion is appropriate, whether the skin should settle first or whether medical review is needed.](/skin-quality-before-aesthetic-consultation/)

- [Is Treatment Suitable For You? A consultation led explanation of how Corey Anderson RN assesses suitability, consent, risk, timing and whether treatment discussion should proceed.](/treatment-suitability-assessment/)

- [How Informed Consent Works In Aesthetic Consultation Consent is not a signature at the end of a conversation. It is the process that lets a patient understand the decision before proceeding.](/how-informed-consent-works-aesthetic-consultation/)

## Clinical references

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

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