Complications are one of the biggest sources of stress in aesthetic practice, not just because of the clinical risk, but because of what happens in the hours and days that follow.
In this second instalment of a two-part series on The Aesthetic Shift podcast, NP Kelly Beasy is joined again by solicitor and former AHPRA investigator David Gardner to unpack what actually protects clinicians when things go wrong.
What stands out in this conversation is how often the greatest risk doesn’t come from the complication itself, but from what happens next: how clinicians think, document, communicate, and escalate in real time.
This episode explores the emotional pattern many practitioners experience, and how that can influence decision-making in the first critical hours.
Panic, uncertainty, and overcorrection can unintentionally escalate risk rather than contain it.
The discussion focuses on the immediate post-complication window:
A key focus is what “defensible management” looks like in real-world scenarios, including delayed vascular compromise and unexpected swelling.
The conversation also explores what often drives complaints after the initial event is under control, particularly communication breakdowns, documentation gaps, and the amplifying effect of social media.
David closes by identifying the most common mistake clinicians make, and what simple system every aesthetic clinic should have in place before anything goes wrong.
Complications are part of aesthetic medicine. What protects you is not perfection, but preparation in documentation, escalation, and communication. Tune into the podcast for the full discussion.
This episode is part of a two-part series. Missed part one? Catch up here.
Prefer a visual format? Watch this podcast on the HealthCert Education YouTube channel.
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Listen to all episodes in The Aesthetic Shift series.
Host Kelly Beasy is a Nurse Practitioner, clinic owner, and cosmetic medicine trainer at KB Aesthetix with 20 years of nursing experience and 10+ years’ experience in the aesthetic industry. She also offers a 1:1 mentorship program for clinicians.
Solicitor and former AHPRA investigator
David Gardner graduated from the University of Adelaide with a Bachelor of Laws and is admitted to practice in the Supreme Court of South Australia and the High Court of Australia. He initially commenced legal practice in commercial litigation, briefly juggled this with teaching at The University of Adelaide, then moved onto a role with AHPRA as an investigator. He was then promoted to a variety of positions including Senior Inspector for criminal prosecutions in NSW and manager of large investigative teams in SA and Victoria.
A growing concern for how practitioners were dealt with by AHPRA pushed David to return to private practice in early 2019, and start his firm Gardner Legal & Regulatory, with the aim of assisting health practitioners to navigate the regulatory space.
Over a decade in health regulation and dealing with practitioners across Australia has led David to identify an absence in crucial non-clinical CPD topics. His focus is now on filling those gaps in the education available to practitioners, to remove the stress of the unknown and enable them to practice in the best way they can.
Learn more at www.ahpd.com.au
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