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The consumer redress scheme works closely with the following professional associations. Members of these professional associations are entitled to the discounted individual membership rates with the Consumer Redress Scheme.
Join NowBritish Association of Cosmetic Nurses (BACN), the largest Professional Association for nurses carrying out cosmetic treatments in the UK with approximately 600 members. The association promote quality of care and offers guidance on industry topics. Established in 2009 and has grown rapidly since then.
British Association of Hair Restoration Surgery (BAHRS) was founded in 1996 by twelve like-minded doctors practicing hair transplant surgery in Britain. The aims are:
British Association of Sclerotherapists was founded in 2002 to meet the growing need for education and training in this specialty area of treatment for leg thread veins.
British College of Aesthetic Medicine (BCAM) was originally founded in 2001 to encourage regulation within the industry and help to make aesthetic medicine safer and more ethical. The BCAM exists to advance safe and ethical aesthetic medicine to the benefit of medical practitioners and members of the public.
Consulting Room Back in 1994 we were involved in the launch of Botox® to the UK market. Over the years we have been at the centre of the industry throughout its development and growth. We have personally visited hundreds of practitioners and clinics, attended industry conferences and meetings at home and abroad, and have developed working relationships with national and international practitioners, doctors, experts, suppliers and distributors. We have an unrivalled dictionary of treatments listed here -http://www.consultingroom.com/Treatment/
International Academy of Advanced Facial Aesthetics (IAAFA), was founded by Professor Bob Khanna in 2005 and holds an annual conference and charity ball. The academy seeks to educate practitioners about good patient care and enhance public awareness of the various fields of facial aesthetic medicine.
The JCCP has been established as a vehicle to promote patient safety in the world of non-surgical aesthetics and hair restoration surgery. It achieves this by the provision of information/advice to the public and its ‘Practitioner Register’. Practitioners must meet stringent entry requirements, sign up to a strict Code of Practice and operate within a new set of standards and competences.
Save Face is a consumer focused organisation who offer their own accreditation system to their members. In an unregulated industry, Save Face was set up to enable access to practitioners who adhere to a code of conduct for consumers seeking non-surgical treatments. The organisation also provides advice on important points patients should consider before going ahead with a treatment.