Rhinoplasty
- Previous nasal procedures or injuries
- Breathing concerns alongside cosmetic goals
- Photographs and specific change requests
- Facial symmetry concerns
One generic form cannot understand every procedure.
Cosmetic surgery clinics need consultation forms that reflect the procedure being requested. Each enquiry should ask the right questions from the start.
Back to ConsultationA nose surgery enquiry, facelift enquiry and breast surgery enquiry should not all follow the same form. Each pathway needs its own context and suitability signals. The questions that matter for a rhinoplasty are not the same as those that matter for a body contouring procedure.
The questions below illustrate why a generic form misses critical context. Each procedure has distinct suitability signals that belong at the start of the intake process.
Procedure-specific forms help staff and practitioners understand the enquiry before deciding whether to book, review, request more information or redirect. When the form matches the procedure, the team receives better context and makes better decisions.
When the right questions are asked early, the clinic spends less time chasing missing details and more time handling suitable patients properly. Every round of follow-up to collect basic information is time taken away from clinical work.
In cosmetic surgery, consultation is part of suitability assessment. It is not just appointment scheduling. Forms that reflect that reality help the clinic run the consultation workflow as a clinical process, not an administrative one.
Procedure-specific forms give the clinic the right starting point for each enquiry, so the team can assess, qualify and handle each patient correctly from the first contact.