WASHINGTON, DC, February 27, 2026 /24-7PressRelease/ -- Dr. Ariel N. Rad, board-certified facial plastic surgeon and co-founder of SHERBER+RAD, is raising awareness around what he calls a "Restraint First" standard in aesthetic medicine — a patient-led approach focused on informed decisions, credential verification, and long-term thinking.
In recent commentary, Dr. Rad emphasised that aesthetic medicine is still medicine, not entertainment.
"Good surgery doesn't announce itself," he said. "It lets people feel like themselves again."
His call comes at a time when cosmetic procedures continue to rise. According to the American Society of Plastic Surgeons, more than 26 million cosmetic procedures are performed annually in the United States. At the same time, industry reports show that over 30% of non-surgical cosmetic treatments are performed by providers without formal plastic surgery training, and revision procedures linked to unqualified providers have increased in recent years.
"Social media has accelerated demand," Dr. Rad noted. "But anatomy hasn't changed. The face is complex. Decisions should not be impulsive."
Additional data underscores the issue:
Nearly 40% of patients seeking revision surgery report insufficient understanding of risks before their first procedure.
Complication rates are significantly lower when procedures are performed in accredited hospital-based settings.
Studies show that patients who take time to verify board certification report higher long-term satisfaction.
Decision regret drops when individuals delay elective procedures and seek second opinions.
Dr. Rad advocates for practical, patient-driven steps rather than policy reform.
"Restraint creates clarity," he said. "Saying no can be a form of care."
What Individuals Can Do Now
Dr. Rad recommends a simple four-step approach:
Verify board certification through recognised medical boards.
Confirm the procedure setting — hospital-based or accredited facilities reduce risk.
Ask how often the surgeon performs the procedure you are considering.
Pause before committing — take 48 hours to reflect before signing consent.
"I focus on depth, not breadth," Dr. Rad said. "Mastery comes from repetition and respect for fundamentals."
He also encourages patients to question trend-driven messaging. "If something sounds effortless or permanent without trade-offs, that's usually incomplete information."
A Call to Action
Dr. Rad urges individuals considering cosmetic treatment to take ownership of their decision-making process. Research your provider. Ask direct questions. Slow down. Choose safety over speed.
"Most success in surgery looks boring up close," he said. "It's repetition done well."
Patients can begin today by reviewing their provider's credentials and confirming where procedures are performed before moving forward. To read the full interview, visit the website here.
Dr. Ariel N. Rad is a board-certified facial plastic surgeon based in Washington, D.C. He co-founded SHERBER+RAD in 2014 with dermatologist Dr. Noëlle Sherber. Known for his expertise in deep-plane and endoscopic facelift surgery, Dr. Rad advocates for evidence-based practice, hospital-based safety standards, and long-term, natural outcomes in aesthetic medicine.
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