Wigmore Medical is delighted to welcome Dr Max Malik as our new key opinion leader. With over 20 years of medical experience, which enables him to create a personalised system of cosmetic medicine, aesthetic dermatology and hair restoration surgery, Dr Malik is a frequent speaker at many conferences, sharing his knowledge and expertise within the aesthetics community.
He is an aesthetics trainer of medical professionals in his Cosmetics Medical Academy and is also a leading expert in the use of botulinum toxins and other injectables. We are excited to be bringing his expertise and experience into the Wigmore arena and working closely with him to ensure that we continue to provide excellent training in an unregulated industry.
Dr Malik will never train anyone who is not medically qualified, and he believes in and will also deliver practical, real world advice to medical professionals, so that they can practice effectively, confidently and safely. He is a member of the Royal College of Psychiatrists and is an expert on the psychological aspects of aesthetic medicine and body dysmorphic disorder.
Cosmetics Medical Academy has an outstanding faculty of experts, including leading senior plastic surgeons, and a world-renowned nose and base of skull surgeon; the combined faculty has decades of teaching experience between them. The main aim is to teach: The Art of Aesthetic Practice with Personalised Learning Outcomes.
Dr Max focuses on the Global Facial Artistic Approach, creating natural results. He incorporates psychological assessment and support in order to improve patients’ confidence. The most common complication in aesthetic medicine is not vascular occlusion, it is psychological dissatisfaction, which may be due to many reasons. Dealing with complications is integral to training and best of all, how to avoid them in the first place. Dr Malik believes the highest aim of all Aesthetic Medicine is improving patients’ quality of life.
Dr Max Malik at FACE 2019
Dr Max Malik will be holding the first of a series of clinical lectures at the FACE conference and exhibition on 7th and 8th June. The topics to be covered in this first talk will include an outline of the three major toxin types, their properties and their storage. Of particular interest will be the considerations in interchanging when using a different toxin, e.g. using a 100 unit toxin instead of Speywood unit toxin. Dr Malik who trains on both units in his Cosmetics Medical Academy is uniquely qualified to give guidance on this topic.
To register your interest in attending this exclusive lecture at FACE, please email events@wigmoremedical.com