The Esthetic Skin Institute,
a highly accredited resource for medical aesthetics training and certification for medical professionals, owes its success to its founder’s unique combination of skills and experience.
Working as a registered nurse in Florida in the 1990s, Sasha Parker discovered that she also had a
keen interest in skin care and holistic health. “I had a
friend who was working as an esthetician,” she ex- plains, “and she was so happy working with healthy, appreciative clients. She was also doing very well.” So Parker obtained licenses both as
an
esthetician and as an electrologist, and started to establish a
skincare practice. Soon she was working in both fields with a goal of
eventually phasing out of nursing and
working full time as a skincare specialist. Her plans changed however after an encounter with a physician at the facility where she worked. Observing his high degree of stress and fatigue,
she suggested
that he consider incorporating skin care
into his practice,
explaining the advantages and benefits
of doing so.
At
the time, the concept of aesthetic medicine was so new
that the MD was uncertain and declined. Later, after attending one of her educational presentations,
he invited her to meet with him and his partner. Convinced of the potential for enhancing his practice with aesthetics, he
invited her to join them.
That was the beginning of the Esthetics Skin Institute. As time passed and the medical aesthetics field developed, more and more doctors and nurses
contracted with Parker for training. Because she was a
gifted and passionate educator,
training soon eclipsed all of her other activities and in 1997 she established the institute.
Today, Parker
provides courses for doctors, registered nurses, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, dentists and dental surgeons
as well as select courses
for
licensed practical
nurses and licensed vocational nurses. No matter what the subject,
her primary goal is training practitioners to provide safe, high quality care. “It’s amazing how many of us feel that just because we
have a license to provide medical care, we are knowledgeable enough to provide aesthetics
care,” she says.
But this isn’t always the case. “In my state,” Parker re- ports, “from 1997 to 2003, 244 cases of adverse events
were
reported from laser treatments. Out of those 244
events, 202 treatments were administered by physicians.” She believes it’s imperative, therefore,
for every
individual in the medical aesthetics
profession—from physicians to nurses to physician assistants—to obtain in-depth, hands-on training. “The key to good delivery of care,” says Parker, “is good education.”
Her high standards for Esthetic Skin Institute courses receive continuous
praise from her students, and her return and referral rates are high. “My students return for training in all of the aesthetics services they plan to offer in their practices,” she notes. “They also refer colleagues who wish to transition into aesthetics or add aesthetic services to their practices.”
Another indication of the quality of her service is the
caliber of physicians who comprise her board of advisers. “Such highly respected physicians do not become affiliated with an organization that is not high quality,” she observes.
Parker has been referred to as “a visionary and a pioneer ahead of her time” for developing this training system. Her response? “I have always been a seeker
and giver of knowledge,” she notes, “and I have had some
great teachers
along the way
who
helped me, so now I strive to help others.”
www.esiw.com
Med-Esthetics
Magazine Feature Article
by Janet McCormick
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