Dr. Ariel N. Rad, a board-certified facial plastic surgeon, is advocating for a "Restraint First" standard in aesthetic medicine that emphasizes patient-led decision-making, credential verification, and long-term thinking. This approach comes as cosmetic procedures continue to increase, with over 26 million performed annually in the United States according to the American Society of Plastic Surgeons, while industry reports indicate over 30% of non-surgical cosmetic treatments are performed by providers without formal plastic surgery training.
"Good surgery doesn't announce itself," Dr. Rad said. "It lets people feel like themselves again." He emphasized that aesthetic medicine remains medicine rather than entertainment, noting that "social media has accelerated demand, but anatomy hasn't changed. The face is complex. Decisions should not be impulsive." Data supporting this approach reveals that nearly 40% of patients seeking revision surgery report insufficient understanding of risks before their first procedure, while complication rates are significantly lower when procedures are performed in accredited hospital-based settings.
Studies also show that patients who verify board certification report higher long-term satisfaction, and decision regret drops when individuals delay elective procedures and seek second opinions. Dr. Rad recommends a practical four-step approach for patients: verify board certification through recognized medical boards, confirm the procedure setting with preference for hospital-based or accredited facilities, ask how often the surgeon performs the specific procedure, and pause for 48 hours before signing consent. "Restraint creates clarity," he explained. "Saying no can be a form of care."
He encourages patients to question trend-driven messaging, noting that "if something sounds effortless or permanent without trade-offs, that's usually incomplete information." Dr. Rad advocates for mastery through repetition and respect for fundamentals rather than breadth of procedures, stating "I focus on depth, not breadth." The surgeon urges individuals to take ownership of their decision-making process by researching providers, asking direct questions, and prioritizing safety over speed. "Most success in surgery looks boring up close," Dr. Rad observed. "It's repetition done well." Patients can begin by reviewing provider credentials and confirming where procedures are performed. To read the full interview, visit https://www.24-7pressrelease.com.


