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Rruge e lokalizuar dhe permbajtje e pershtatur e artikullit
Ky artikull eshte lokalizuar per shqip. Disa seksione te gjata mund te mbeten prane formulimit burimor ne gjuhen anglisht.
Permbledhje e shpejte · Shkurt
Choosing a medical aesthetics doctor safely means looking beyond social media popularity or a low price. The important criteria are medical qualification, active aesthetic practice, original product transparency, anatomy knowledge, sterile standards, complication management, realistic consultation style, and ethical follow-up. This guide summarizes the questions patients should ask and the red flags that often predict poor care.
Pikat kryesore
Patients often search for the best Botox or filler doctor, but the safer question is more specific: who is the right doctor for my anatomy, my goals, and the level of medical responsibility this treatment requires?
Aesthetic medicine is still medicine. That means your result depends not only on the product, but on who is injecting it, how well they understand anatomy, whether they can manage risk, and whether they are willing to say no when the plan is wrong.
Start by confirming that the injector is a licensed medical doctor and that aesthetic procedures are a real part of their active practice, not an occasional add-on. Years of experience alone are not enough unless they reflect repeated hands-on work with injectables, lasers, and complication awareness.
The consultation should feel medical, not promotional. A serious doctor asks about prior treatments, medication, allergies, expectations, healing tolerance, and whether the indication is even correct before discussing price.
A trustworthy clinic can name the brand, show the original box or vial, explain how the product is stored, and describe why that product family suits your plan. If a clinic says the brand does not matter, that is already a warning sign.
For fillers especially, anatomy knowledge is critical. A good injector should be able to explain vascular risk, how they reduce it, and what emergency tools or protocols are available if a complication occurs.
Ask who performs the injection, how the dose or volume is chosen, what the follow-up system is, and what happens if there is bruising, asymmetry, ptosis, or a vascular concern. Specific answers are a good sign. Vague reassurance is not.
Red flags include unusually low pricing, pressure to decide immediately, no cooling-off time, no informed consent logic, no meaningful follow-up pathway, hidden product identity, and social-media-heavy sales language without clinical substance.
In a high-volume city such as Istanbul, patients should be even more disciplined because strong marketing can hide weak medical structure. The best clinic is usually the one that explains the least glamorous details most clearly.
If you are visiting from abroad, the same standards apply plus language support, remote follow-up, documented aftercare, and a realistic plan for what happens once you leave the city.
Dr. Gemici: In aesthetics, patients often think they are buying a product. In reality they are choosing a medical decision-maker. That is the choice that protects the outcome.
No. Injectable medical aesthetic procedures should be handled by a qualified physician because diagnosis, anatomy, consent, and complication management are medical responsibilities.
No. It may indicate visibility, but it does not prove anatomy skill, product quality, or ethical planning.
When a clinic cannot explain who injects, what product is used, and how risk is managed, the marketing is stronger than the medicine.

I besueshem dhe profesional
Dr. Hamza Gemici eshte mjek i estetikes mjekesore me klinike ne Atasehir, Stamboll. Praktika e tij fokusohet ne anti-aging natyral dhe harmonizim delikat te fytyres me toksine botulinike, mbushes dermale, rejuvenim periokular dhe trajtime per cilesine e lekures. Te gjitha trajtimet kryhen me produkte te miratuara nga FDA sipas protokolleve te mbikeqyrura nga mjeku.