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International Journal of Forensic Sciences Research Article 14 min read

How to Investigate Legal and Professional Liability in Cosmetic Intervention Issues

Elshama SS*
* Corresponding author
ISSN: 2573-1734  10.23880/ijfsc-16000378  Received: March 21, 2024  Published: April 04, 2024
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Keywords
Cosmetic Interventions Legal Liability Professional Liability
Abstract

In recent years, cosmetic interventions have been growing rapidly in the world for beauty and luxury. Cosmetic interventions are classified into two types. The first type is surgical or invasive cosmetic intervention type which has a high risk such as liposuction and rhinoplasty while the second type is non-surgical, reversible, minimally invasive cosmetic interventions with low risk such as Botox and fillers. The surgical type of cosmetic intervention may be reconstructive type due to acceptable medical reasons such as repair of congenital defects or aesthetic type for beauty only. In recent years, a lot of claims have arisen against cosmetic intervention professionals because of improper performance of cosmetic interventions, medical negligence, or complications such as deformity and facial disfigurement. Therefore, this article aims to show professional standards of cosmetic interventions that should be applied and discuss rules that govern the legal and professional liability of physicians while performing these cosmetic interventions.

Introduction

Cosmetic interventions are used methods to improve the health status of humans wherein health is the convenience of complete physical, mental, social, and spiritual aesthetic interventions according to WHO [1]. Cosmetic surgery is already a feature of plastic surgery that become more common use in recent years in the world wherein it is considered a desirable choice for many persons to undergo an invasive medical intervention or surgical operation for an alteration of physical appearance for aesthetic reasons, not medical reasons [2].

Cosmetic interventions are classified into surgical, invasive cosmetic intervention types with a high risk that require general anesthesia while the other types are non-surgical, reversible, minimally invasive cosmetic interventions with low risk that require local anesthesia wherein is carried out in outpatient clinics or beauty centers by non-physicians and nonqualified persons such as Botox, fillers, and chemical peels [3].

The surgical type of cosmetic intervention usually is a choice toward beauty and luxury such as liposuction and rhinoplasty. On the other hand, there is another type of plastic surgery that is reconstructive because of psychological reasons or congenital anomalies such as cleft lip or deformities from different causes such as burns and motor car accidents wherein it represents a necessity to improve aesthetic features based on acceptable medical reasons [4].

In recent years, cosmetic interventions for beauty have been growing rapidly, especially for women who have increased concerns about their appearance for improving confidence. It was noted that the excessive use and abuse of cosmetic interventions are due to several factors wherein some factors are related to personality and psychological status, and other factors are related to social, community, and cultural changes. so, cosmetic procedures did not look as stigma as in the past [5].

In this context, a lot of claims have arisen against cosmetic intervention professionals because of improper performance of cosmetic interventions, medical negligence, or early and long-term complications such as deformity and facial disfigurement. Moreover, medical ethics abuse and violation of ethical principles during cosmetic interventions have greatly increased, and many ethical questions have been raised. Is cosmetic intervention commercial or is it part of the health care system of the patient? [6].

In addition, several factors represent a medicolegal challenge during performing cosmetic interventions. The assessment of the results quality usually is extremely subjective because it is done by the patient; besides, there is a mismatch between the patient’s expectations and the gained results. In addition, the type of personality of the patient that doesn’t tolerate imperfection, and the possibility of permanent disfigurement [7].

Therefore, this article aims to discuss rules that govern the legal and professional liability of physicians when performing cosmetic interventions, and then establish norms that help medicolegalists investigate medicolegal and malpractice issues related to this high-risk specialty which emerged in recent years.

Professional Standards of Cosmetic Interventions

The physician should commit to many ethical, legal, and professional rules before, during, and after cosmetic interventions. Firstly, the physician should be competent, certified, and qualified with enough practical experience in this area to perform these interventions. So, the medcolegalist should investigate the qualifications of a physician and ensure that cosmetic intervention is within the limit of his competency [8].

The physician should apply the different known rules whether international, national, ethical, or legal rules that are related to cosmetic intervention such as getting informed consent from the patient based on medicolegal rules that are capacity, voluntariness, and understanding [9]. So, the physician must communicate clearly with the patient, listen to his concerns, and explain the related information using appropriate language encouraging the patient to discuss the suggested procedure to help him make an informed consent about the cosmetic intervention [10].

The medcolegalist should ensure that the used medical devices, medicines, and implants in cosmetic intervention by the physician comply with international medical product criteria. Moreover, the physician is also responsible for ensuring that the used equipment is fit for the purpose before intervention [11]. Moreover, the physician should ask the patient about the expected outcome he hopes for, and then assess whether this intervention is appropriate and meets his needs or not. So, the physician should consider the medical history and general health of the patient besides age, co-morbidities, and medications [12].

Moreover, the physician must avoid any cosmetic intervention for the psychologically vulnerable patient because this may affect the patient’s satisfaction with the outcome of cosmetic intervention. Many features may detect the psychological patient such as if the patient’s expectation of the outcome of surgery is unrealistic, or if the patient has a history of repeated cosmetic interventions, especially in one anatomical area leading to dissatisfaction [13].

Furthermore, a physician must give a complete illustration of cosmetic intervention to the patient including its implications, duration, length of recovery, and any possible complications besides likely realistic outcome, benefit and risk, and anticipated impact on the lifestyle of the patient. Moreover, the patient should know the plan of follow-up, aftercare, and the relevant financial implications [14].

In addition, all data of the patient including personal information and cosmetic intervention must be recorded securely, always respecting the patient’s rights to privacy and confidentiality. On the other hand, a physician must be honest with his patient. It should not falsely claim that cosmetic intervention is risk-free or misleading about the desirable results [15]. Moreover, physicians should apply sound cosmetic intervention based on well-established scientific rules in a safe practical, and suitably equipped environment using the best available effective updated intervention without risk and with minimal side effects. Finally, physicians must be clear about financial considerations without any effect on the quality of cosmetic intervention itself, the standard of care, or recommendations to the patient [16].

Conclusion

Cosmetic interventions are used methods to improve the health status of humans. It may be surgical or not surgical. Recently, medical ethics abuse and violation of ethical principles during cosmetic interventions have greatly increased, and many ethical questions have been raised. So, many ethical, legal, and professional rules should be committed by the physician before, during, and after cosmetic interventions. Therefore, when the medicolegalist investigates these medicolegal issues, he should be aware of the rules that govern the legal and professional liability of physicians when performing cosmetic interventions because this is considered a high-risk specialty that led to many medicolegal problems and malpractice in recent years.

Declaration of Conflicting Interests

The author declares that there is no conflict of interest.

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@article{elshama2024,
  title   = {How to Investigate Legal and Professional Liability in Cosmetic Intervention Issues},
  author  = {Elshama SS},
  journal = {International Journal of Forensic Sciences},
  year    = {2024},
  volume  = {9},
  number  = {2},
  doi     = {10.23880/ijfsc-16000378}
}
Elshama SS (2024). How to Investigate Legal and Professional Liability in Cosmetic Intervention Issues. International Journal of Forensic Sciences, 9(2). https://doi.org/10.23880/ijfsc-16000378
TY  - JOUR
TI  - How to Investigate Legal and Professional Liability in Cosmetic Intervention Issues
AU  - Elshama SS
JO  - International Journal of Forensic Sciences
PY  - 2024
VL  - 9
IS  - 2
DO  - 10.23880/ijfsc-16000378
ER  -