COPIED
9 mins

JULIE SCOTT

STAYING HUMAN IN AESTHETICS

In an increasingly transactional industry, staying connected to the people behind the treatments has never been more important. Julie Scott reflects on compassion, boundaries and the value of remaining fully present in aesthetic practice.

I remember a patient I treated early in my nursing career, long before aesthetics, when I was working in plastic surgery. She had been through a bilateral mastectomy and reconstruction, and on the morning I cared for her, she was not asking about her wounds or her recovery timeline. She was standing at the mirror in her room, very still, looking at herself with an expression I have never forgotten: not grief exactly, and not relief, but something more complex and more private than either. I did not say anything clinical. I simply stood beside her and we stayed there together in the quiet for a long moment; two people at the edge of something language could not quite reach. Sometimes that is all there is to offer, and sometimes it is everything.

I have thought about that moment many times since, because it taught me something about this profession that no training course has ever articulated quite as clearly: that the most powerful thing we can bring to any patient encounter is not our technical skill, though that matters enormously, but our willingness to remain fully present with another person’s experience; it taught me, in short, the discipline of staying human.

THE EMOTIONAL LABOUR NO ONE TALKS ABOUT

When people think of aesthetic medicine, they picture syringes, skincare and surface-level transformation. What they rarely see is the emotional labour sitting quietly beneath every consultation; we do not simply assess faces; we assess fear; we do not merely evaluate skin quality; we navigate confidence, identity and self-worth. We do not only treat the visible signs of ageing; we bear witness to the meaning patients attach to it, and that meaning is rarely straightforward.

There is a weight to this work that cannot be taught in a course or defined in a competency framework. It is the sustained effort of holding space for people who are anxious, self-critical or quietly ashamed, of listening as someone describes their own face with a harshness they would never direct at anyone they loved. The question is not whether this affects us, because it does, but whether we are honest enough to notice it before it begins to change us.

WHEN COMPASSION BECOMES FATIGUE

One of the greatest risks in aesthetics is not a lack of competence but emotional fatigue, and it is far more common than the profession admits. Compassion fatigue is disguised in efficiency, professionalism and busyness. It emerges as impatience in a consultation that deserves more time, as reduced curiosity about the person in front of you, as a subtle emotional withdrawal that begins to feel so normal you stop noticing it is happening at all.

I have written before about burnout, and I remain convinced it is not always about workload alone. More often, it comes from carrying significant emotional responsibility without acknowledging its weight, from giving consistently while holding yourself to a standard of endless availability that no human being can sustain indefinitely. In an industry that celebrates productivity and visibility, it is easy to forget that we are human too, and that caring deeply over a long career, without honest replenishment, will quietly cost you far more than you budgeted for.

THE TRANSACTION TRAP

There is a shift happening in aesthetics that I find genuinely troubling: the increasing tendency to frame aesthetic medicine as a transaction rather than a relationship. The language of consumerism creeps in with surprising ease. Patients pay, practitioners provide, and everyone moves efficiently on to the next appointment. But aesthetic medicine was never designed to be transactional, not if we are practising with the ethical depth the work demands.

Our work is not simply about delivering a product or a service; it’s about judgement, assessment, safeguarding and psychology. It is about knowing, sometimes, when not to treat, and having the integrity to act on that knowledge even when a patient is disappointed. When we begin to see patients as appointments rather than people, we lose the professional responsibility that gives the work its meaning, and over time, we risk losing a fundamental part of ourselves.

One of the things I am most proud of in my own practice is that my patient relationships are not transactional; many have been with me for over a decade, some for more than twenty years, and I now support the adult children of patients I first treated in their thirties. That kind of continuity is not built on convenience or pricing; it’s built on trust, and trust of that depth can only be earned by practitioners who have remained genuinely human throughout.

STAYING HUMAN DOES NOT MEAN SAYING YES

Kindness in aesthetics is frequently mistaken for accommodation, and I want to challenge that directly, because it is one of the most quietly damaging misunderstandings in our profession. Staying human does not mean saying yes to everything; it does not mean absorbing a patient’s anxiety as though resolving it is your clinical responsibility, or bending the boundaries that exist precisely to protect both of you. Some of the most compassionate acts we can offer are the ones that involve saying no: no to rushing a consultation that needs more time, no to treating someone who is not emotionally ready, no to expectations that are neither realistic nor in the patient’s genuine interest. I have always been unapologetically cautious in my practice, and caution, exercised with warmth and explained with honesty, is one of the most deeply human things a practitioner can offer. It is not rejection; it is care delivered with integrity.

WHEN PATIENTS ASK FOR ONE THING BUT NEED ANOTHER

One of the most delicate skills in aesthetic practice is learning to recognise that what a patient requests is not always what they truly need. More often than we openly admit, patients arrive asking for a correction when what they are really carrying is something far heavier. A loss of confidence after a significant life change. A shift in identity they cannot quite name. The quiet, disorienting feeling of no longer recognising themselves in the mirror, not because of how they look, but because of everything that has happened to them.

I remember a returning patient who came to see me a few years ago and has stayed with me ever since. She was polished, articulate and outwardly successful, and on paper her treatment plan was entirely straightforward. I could have treated her easily that day, but within minutes of sitting with her, I sensed that her words and her body language were telling different stories. She kept returning to a feature that clinically barely registered, and the more she spoke, the clearer it became that this was not really about her face at all. It was about a relationship that had broken down, a loss of identity she had not yet found language for, and the quiet fear of becoming invisible in midlife.

In that moment, I could have treated her, and she would have thanked me for it. Instead, I paused and asked: “If we did absolutely nothing today, what are you hoping would change?” She looked at me for a moment and said softly, “I just want to feel like myself again.” We did not treat that day; we just talked. When she returned some months later, she was in a genuinely different emotional space, and only then did we begin her treatment journey in a way that felt grounded and right. In aesthetics, what makes the greatest difference is the ability to see the whole person, not only the face they have brought to you.

PROTECTING OUR HUMANITY

If we want to stay human in a demanding industry, we have to become deliberate about what we protect, and that includes qualities the profession does not always reward publicly: our softness, our sensitivity, our capacity to be affected by what we witness. These are not weaknesses to be managed; they are the very qualities that make us good at this work, and losing them is a far greater professional risk than most practitioners recognise until it is behind them.

I have known practitioners who have hardened over the years. They are not unkind, but they are guarded, a little distant, and so efficiently detached that something essential has quietly left the room before the patient has even sat down. I understand how it happens, because this profession asks a great deal of us emotionally, and armour is a logical response to repeated exposure. But when we lose genuine connection, the work eventually becomes hollow, and technical excellence alone, however impressive, is not sufficient to sustain a career that still feels meaningful. Protecting our humanity means acknowledging honestly the emotional cost of what we do, building real recovery into our working weeks, surrounding ourselves with people who ground us, and stepping away from the noise of the industry before it has the chance to gradually erode our sense of who we are and why we began.

THE PRACTITIONERS WHO ENDURE

In my view, patients reward presence, and presence requires emotional steadiness and a quality of calm that can only be sustained by practitioners who have learned to protect themselves as carefully as they protect their patients. As aesthetics continues to grow and the influence of social media continues to blur the line between healthcare and consumerism, this becomes not just a personal matter but a collective one. The practitioners whose reputations are still standing 20 years from now will almost certainly be those who chose depth over visibility, every time it was offered.

CLOSING REFLECTION

The longer I practise, the more certain I become that the greatest skill in aesthetics is not technical, though technical excellence remains non-negotiable. It is the capacity to remain human. To listen when it would be easier to proceed. To care when detachment would be more comfortable. To stay kind when the industry around you feels impatient, noisy and relentlessly transactional. Staying human is a choice, made quietly and repeatedly over the course of a career, in the consultations no one will ever see, in the moments when you could have rushed but chose not to, in the standards you hold not because anyone is watching but because you have not yet made peace with lowering them. Perhaps the greatest gift we can offer our patients is not simply how we treat their skin, but how we honour their humanity while carefully, safeguarding our own.

Next month, in the second part of this exploration, I will turn the lens inward in my piece, The Practitioner Behind the Practitioner, asking not what staying human requires of us in the room with our patients, but what we carry home and what we owe ourselves in return.

Scott Shares.

Reflections for practitioners who care deeply.

JULIE SCOTT

Julie Scott RGN, NIP, PGDip(Aes) is an independent nurse prescriber, Level 7 qualified aesthetic injector and trainer with more than 30 years of experience in the field of plastics and skin rejuvenation. She is an aesthetic mentor and international speaker, who has won the Aesthetics Awards ‘Aesthetic Nurse Practitioner of the Year’ in both 2022 & 2024, and ‘Best Clinic South of England’ 2023 awards. She also sits on the Aesthetics Reviewing Panel for the Aesthetics Journal, is a Board member for DANAI and is an ambassador and KOL for the JCCP and several leading aesthetic brands.

This article appears in Jul/Aug 2026

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This article appears in...
Jul/Aug 2026
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DEAR READERS
Welcome to the July/August issue of Aesthetic Medicine Magazine.
MEET THE EXPERTS
The Aesthetic Medicine editorial board’s clinical expertise and diverse range of specialities help ensure the magazine meets the needs of the readers. In this issue, we have received guidance from the following members:
HOT OFF THE PRESS
BCAM warns public over illegal and unregulated peptide injections
OUT & ABOUT
CIRCADIA UK’S MINISTRY OF SKIN 2026 Knebworth House, Stevenage
GETTING TO KNOW DR AHMED EL HOUSSIENY
After beginning his career in one of medicine’s most demanding specialties, Dr Ahmed El Houssieny has built a successful clinic, training academy and reputation as a leading educator in aesthetics. He speaks to editor Kezia Parkins about governance, business, education and why caution still matters in a fast-moving sector.
THE RISE OF THE ‘MINI BLEPH’
Dr Richard Devine explains why blepharoplasty is becoming a more mainstream option for patients looking to refresh tired eyes and how he achieves comparable results without surgery.
Case study: COMBINATION REGENERATIVE HAIR RESTORATION
Natalie Clendinning showcases hair restoration outcomes with microneedling, exosomes, and polynucleotide injections.
THE NEW PREVENTION ERA
Anna Dobbie investigates how longevity medicine, advanced diagnostic technology and personalised health strategies are shifting the sector’s focus toward preventative treatments
CUTTING-EDGE CLINICS
From bookings and marketing to reporting and patient communication, AI is helping clinics work smarter, reduce admin and drive growth.
SCALP MATTERS
Why the scalp should be treated with the same clinical seriousness as the skin
IS AI CHANGING THE RISK LANDSCAPE IN AESTHETICS?
AI is changing aesthetics – but responsibility still sits with us, writes Eddie Hooker , founder and CEO of Hamilton Fraser
DOES A FACELIFT REALLY SLIP? SETTING PATIENT EXPECTATIONS FOR THE LONG TERM
Addressing the common patient concern of post-surgical ‘slippage,’ Dr. Roberto Viel explores the realities of tissue settling, the importance of lift vectors, and the strategic maintenance required to ensure long-term rejuvenation.
NOT ALL PRP IS THE SAME
Claudia McGloin explains how to understand leukocyte-rich and leukocyte-poor preparations
TESTOSTERONE TRUTH
Dr Ginni Mansberg examines what science says about testosterone and the skin, separating evidence from trends
THE HUMAN TOUCH
As artificial intelligence becomes more and more embedded in the patient journey, Vicky Eldridge asks, are we losing sight of what really matters in aesthetic practice?
OVER “DONE”
Emma Wedgwood looks at how regenerative treatments are shifting aesthetic medicine away from correction and towards restoring definition, structure and long-term skin health.
MEDICAL-GRADE MYTH
Is “medical-grade” cosmetics a term without definition?
STAYING HUMAN IN AESTHETICS
In an increasingly transactional industry, staying connected to the people behind the treatments has never been more important. Julie Scott reflects on compassion, boundaries and the value of remaining fully present in aesthetic practice.
STANDARDS OR SUGGESTIONS?
Everyone supports high standards, until they become inconvenient. Amy Bird examines why standards without enforcement are simply suggestions
A NO BRAINER FOR AESTHETIC CLINICS
Lisa Kelly explores the practical AI tools that are already helping aesthetic clinics save time, improve efficiency and unlock new revenue opportunities
LEGAL CHECKLIST
Peter Kouwenberg, explains the key legal considerations aesthetic practitioners should address before introducing new services.
HOW SHOULD EVOLVING LASER REGULATIONS IMPACT MY CLINIC’S APPROACH TO SKIN RESURFACING?
How should evolving laser regulations impact my clinic’s approach to skin resurfacing? he regulatory landscape for aesthetic treatments
HOW CAN OMEGA-3 SUPPORT TREATMENT OUTCOMES?
How can omega-3 support treatment outcomes?
THE RELIABLE ONES
Anna Miller answers why the people you depend on most may be carrying more than you realise
AUTHENTIC DESIGN
Does your clinic truly mirror the brand you promote online? Katie Thomas explains why crafting a clinical environment that aligns with your marketing ensures clients get everything they expect – and more
TACKLING PROFESSIONAL ISOLATION IN AESTHETIC MEDICINE
As aesthetic medicine continues to mature, many practitioners still work in relative isolation compared with their colleagues in traditional healthcare settings. Dr Jordan Faulkner argues that stronger professional networks, mentorship and collaborative learning are essential to improving governance, clinician wellbeing and patient safety across the specialty.
ALUMIER MD INTELLIRET BOOST PEEL
Editorial assistant, Connie Cooper tried the new Alumier MD IntelliRET Boost peel within a customised skin peel treatment, addressing breakout prone skin
TEOXANE BABYGLOW AT COSMETIC SKIN CLINIC
Editor Kezia Parkins got the opportunity to try Teoxane’s newest treatment, babyGLOW™, at the Cosmetic Skin Clinic.
PRODUCT NEWS
Medik8 Medik8’s Exo-PDRN Prismatic+ Pro Concentrate is a
5 MINUTES WITH EMILY-LOUISE VARNFIELD
Emily-Louise Varnfield , founder of The Beaute Group , discusses the future of aesthetic technology, the importance of clinical outcomes and the opportunities shaping the industry.
5 tech-forward practitioners to follow
These five practitioners are driving conversations in the increasingly technology driven industry
Ask Alex
“Everyone on TikTok seems to just talk now. Should I be ‘yapping’ too?”
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