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Medical Aesthetics Physician Training

Definition: The Medical Aesthetics Physician Training programme is a peer-education curriculum in which Dr. Hamza Gemici transmits 30+ years of clinical experience to other physicians in a structured form. Its spine is the principle of primum non nocere (first, do no harm), anatomical safety and the minimum effective dose.

This page is intended for physicians and medical students, not patients. The content describes a professional-education framework; it is not individual medical advice or a treatment recommendation for any patient.

Last reviewed: 2026-06-14

Primum non nocere

First, do no harm.

A good aesthetic outcome is a by-product of a good safety decision. The aim of the training is not to "sell" new techniques, but for every physician to develop a reflex that protects anatomy, limits dose and manages complications early.

Teaching Principles

Safety first, aesthetics second

Every module teaches how a technique can cause harm before teaching the technique itself.

Evidence-based, without hype

The basis is clinical literature, product approvals and realistic expectations — not marketing claims.

Physician to physician

The content focuses on strengthening colleagues’ clinical-decision reflex, not on patient marketing.

Curriculum Modules

  1. 1

    Facial Anatomy and Safe Injection Planes

    Asking "where not to inject" first, working from the vascular and nerve map.

    • Anatomical review of high-risk zones (glabella, nose, nasolabial, periorbital) and danger vessels.
    • Rationale for injection plane, cannula vs. needle choice, and aspiration/slow-injection logic.
    • Assessing tissue volume and proportion — anatomy-preserving support, not distortion.
  2. 2

    Minimum Effective Dose and the "Less Is More" Approach

    Teaching the ability to stop at the lowest effective dose as a skill.

    • Managing outcomes through correct indication and patient selection rather than escalating dose.
    • Advocating a staged (titrated) approach, reversibility and the logic of a "top-up appointment".
    • Keeping the patient within a natural limit: the ethical and medical cost of an overdone result.
  3. 3

    Complication Recognition and Emergency Management

    Rehearsing the worst-case scenario before it happens.

    • Early recognition of vascular occlusion signs and keeping a hyaluronidase protocol ready.
    • Step-wise management of infection, nodules, delayed-onset reactions and ptosis.
    • Standardising an emergency contact line, referral threshold and a written urgent-symptom handout for the patient.
  4. 4

    Patient Selection, Consent and Medical Ethics

    Sometimes the most correct clinical decision is "not to perform the procedure".

    • Expectation management and evaluating unrealistic requests and body-image red flags.
    • Informed consent, contraindications and the clinical legitimacy of saying "no".
    • The professional-ethics framework and limits on advertising/claim language — avoiding "guaranteed / best / painless".
  5. 5

    Product Safety and Traceability

    Which product, which approval, which lot — on record.

    • TİTCK and CE approval, product-level FDA status, and clearly separating off-label uses.
    • Lot-number traceability, cold chain and supply discipline against counterfeit-product risk.
    • Documentation: keeping the procedure note, photograph and consent form in a standard record.
  6. 6

    Objective Measurement and Outcome Follow-up

    Measuring the outcome, not just remembering it.

    • Standardised photography, before/after comparison and sharing a realistic results timeline with the patient.
    • The logic of the follow-up appointment and justifying the decision between a "top-up" and a "repeat procedure".
    • The Skin Longevity framework: targeting long-term skin health over today’s appearance.

Basis and Related Frameworks

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Who are these trainings for?
They are for physicians who practise — or wish to move into — medical aesthetics, and for relevant medical students. They are not a guide for patient self-treatment.
What is at the centre of the training?
Primum non nocere — first, do no harm. Anatomical safety, the minimum effective dose, complication management and ethical decision-making form the common spine of every module.
Is the programme and content fixed?
The headings above are the framework of the curriculum; the scope is planned individually according to the experience level of the participating physicians. Details require contacting the clinic.
What is Dr. Gemici’s position as a trainer?
Alongside 30+ years of clinical experience, he serves as Medical Director at Doktorclub.com, overseeing clinical content, and places importance on sharing knowledge with fellow physicians.

Author

This training framework is based on Dr. Hamza Gemici’s 30+ years of clinical experience in medical aesthetics and his safety philosophy grounded in primum non nocere. Dr. Gemici also serves as Medical Director at Doktorclub.com, overseeing clinical content.

Medically reviewed by: Dr. Hamza Gemici — 2026-06-14