Cosmetic If we accept that skin is healthy only if the individual is content with the way their skin looks, feels and functions, cosmetic and aesthetic considerations become part of skin health. Currently in the UK cosmetic dermatology remains a relatively small proportion of a dermatologist’s work and most of what is done is as part of private practice. However in other countries, for example the United States of America, officebased dermatologists provide extensive cosmetic services with nurses providing significant support and education to patients and technical assistance to their medical colleagues. For many the march towards dermatologists doing more cosmetic work is an inevitable part of the modern age. If we accept the fact that skin health includes the psychological well-being which comes as part of feeling good about oneself, this shift may seem acceptable. However, in a national health service with limited resources, providing cosmetic care within that system is generally considered inappropriate. Indeed when dermatologists’ skills are at a premium in order to manage chronic skin disease and skin cancer, it may be considered immoral to use those skills for nondermatological disease procedures. It can be a challenge to determine when a skin problem is ‘purely cosmetic’ and when it is a dermatological disease requiring treatment. For example, removal of a skin tag (which is harmless to physical health) may be seen as a cosmetic procedure and therefore not a treatment to be carried out as part of a national (public) health service. However, if the skin tag is exactly in a position which catches on a bra-strap and causes pain and discomfort each day, a case may be made for its removal. Likewise a skin tag on the neck may cause acute embarrassment and psychological damage for an individual and thus seeing its removal as part of a treatment process, is a relevant approach. The first example may seem more clear cut, but that is because priorities in health care are usually given to problems that give physical rather than emotional pain. It is easy to see that the line between cosmesis and treatment is blurred and often fraught with controversy. The beauty industry focuses on the attributes of young looking skin and works hard to persuade a youth oriented world that those attributes are positive and desirable. These messages are so effective that individuals will go to considerable lengths to achieve younger looking skin. Table 1.2 gives some examples of beauty treatments with their intended outcomes, methods of working and possible side effects. In general youth enhancing treatments aim to reduce signs of ageing by smoothing and/or filling wrinkles and improving texture and colouring. Any nurses interested in working in the field of aesthetics would do well to read the latest Royal College of Nursing Guidance (2008) (Royal College of Nursing, 2008).
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