The medical practitioners, doctors and nurses are in a good position to adopt aesthetic medicine as their side career. The rights of prescription enable the doctors to do aesthetic practice independently while the prescribing nurses can also pursue their aesthetics career independently. They also remain in high demand in aesthetic clinics.
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Gone are the days when nurses were just limited to working in the medical specialities. Aesthetic medicine offers an exciting and rewarding career for nurses with a work and personal life balance. It offers you a new direction and a thriving career path as an aesthetic nurse.
Cosmetic nursing is an emerging field for nurses. Cosmetic nurses can work under the supervision of doctors or independently if they have the require qualification and training, to perform the minimally invasive cosmetic procedures. As a nurse, you can increase your career prospects by getting proper training in non-surgical aesthetic courses such as botox training courses. For this, you need to start off by choosing the right training from the expert, qualified and experienced cosmetic practitioners having the core skills of performing the aesthetic treatment.
Botox cosmetics continue to rank among the leading minimally invasive cosmetic procedures year after year. The primary fact behind its popularity is the increase in the awareness in general public about the effectiveness of non-invasive cosmetic treatments that are largely available today and helps in delaying the signs of ageing with minimal side effects and little downtime. According to the surveys conducted by American Society of Plastic Surgeons, the number of Americans seeking non-invasive cosmetic procedures for improving their facial appearance is increasing day by day.
Researchers at the University of Southern Denmark have made a breakthrough discovery. The research has revealed that skin can communicate with the liver. The breakthrough study might prove to be pivotal in understanding how skin diseases can exert effect on the rest of the body. The discovery wasn’t intentional as Professor Susanne Mandrup and her research group in collaboration with Nils Færgeman's research group at the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology at the University of Southern Denmark were doing something totally different. |
AuthorDr. Stephen Harley is a cosmetic surgeon specializing in dermatology, Botox and dermal fillers treatment. He has been serving in his London-based clinic for last 8 years. He often writes on the Internet, discussing skin and other related issues and the latest developments in the field of dermatology. Archives
August 2017
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