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How do we nurture the fast changes of technology in longevity and not lose sight of our unique beauty? Can they live together? As a medical doctor who’s worked at the intersection of functional medicine and aesthetic treatments for over two decades, I believe in a new model of aging gracefully, one that blends regenerative science with medical integrity and celebrates individual beauty, not perfection.

Beyond Beauty: Modern longevity aesthetics

With the rapid growth of aesthetic medicine, it’s easy to get caught up in the promise of instant results: tighter skin, fewer lines, more volume. Add to that the constant pressure from social-media filters, celebrity faces, and quick-fix procedures, and we risk forgetting something important: our face tells a unique story. No two are the same, and that individuality is worth protecting.

People deserve to understand what true longevity aesthetics really involves. It’s not about chasing youth at all costs. It’s about preserving vitality, restoring function, and enhancing one’s most authentic self.

As doctors in aesthetic medicine, we now have access to highly effective tools, from botulinum toxin and dermal fillers to PRF, polynucleotides, and collagen biostimulators. Used correctly, they can significantly improve the way the skin functions and ages. But with this power comes responsibility. Just because we can do something doesn’t mean we always should.

Health and aesthetics are deeply connected.

When we prioritize internal balance, stable blood sugar, good sleep, low inflammation, and hormonal harmony, the skin responds better to treatments. Recovery is faster. Results are more natural and longer-lasting.

A well-executed aesthetic plan should respect facial proportion, bone structure, and movement. Subtle changes, when guided by anatomy, experience, and restraint, can bring out your natural features, while preserving your expressions and character. That’s where real artistry meets medicine.

What often leads patients away from their individuality is the pursuit of perfection, symmetrical faces, exaggerated contours, or trends that don’t suit them. The truth is, symmetry isn’t the gold standard in beauty. Harmony is. And harmony is deeply personal.

How do we stay grounded in our own identity in a world of aesthetic enhancement?

  • We ask the right questions;
  • We choose medically trained professionals who assess the whole person, including health and lifestyle;
  • We focus on subtle improvements that support, not override, our natural structure; and
  • We recognize that the best results don’t scream; they’re subtle.

Aesthetic medicine should never be about transformation for the sake of it. It’s about thoughtful, safe, and patient-specific care that enhances both confidence and well-being.

Maureen Allem : Skin Renewal Co Founder

Dr Maureen Allem

What you should be wary of

Unfortunately, as aesthetics becomes more mainstream, it’s also being trivialized. Some beauty clinics and nonmedical operators market injectables as if they’re no-risk add-ons to a facial, turning medical acts into menu items. The consequences are serious.

When things go wrong (vascular occlusion, nodules, infections, allergic reactions), they require an immediate clinical intervention, and an experienced practitioner can mean the difference between full recovery and permanent damage. Beauty salons are simply not equipped for this.

Would you trust a nail bar to treat tissue necrosis or manage a stroke? That’s the level of risk when filler enters a vessel and blocks blood supply to the skin, eyes, or brain. And yet, every day, these procedures are being done by doctors in inappropriate environments, such as beauty, nail, or hair salons, with no follow-up care, or by non-doctors who’re oblivious to the risks associated with these medical procedures.

Let’s be clear: injectables aren’t beauty treatments

They’re medical procedures that act on the neurovascular, muscular, and immune systems. Every injection carries risk, and must be guided by anatomical precision, clinical training, and ethical judgment.

I’ve seen too many cases of complications arising from nonmedical settings, no sterile protocol, and no emergency plan. When filler enters a blood vessel and causes vascular occlusion, time is tissue. Only a medically equipped clinic can handle this level of risk with the urgency and expertise it demands.

Structured anti-aging approach

I believe in a structured anti-aging protocol, starting with functional health optimization, then followed by a sequenced aesthetic plan:

  • Foundation first: sleep regulation, stress management, hormonal balance, gut integrity, and metabolic control;
  • Then skin health: using regenerative therapies such as PRF, microneedling with growth factors, radiofrequency, and laser to strengthen barrier function, improve microcirculation, and boost collagen;
  • Then facial structure: deeper-placed high “G” fillers to strengthen facial support ligaments, restore lift, and recontour facial volume loss; and
  • Finally, finesse: superficial fillers and skin boosters to refine texture, treat fine lines, rejuvenate the lips ,and elevate glow, always in harmony with natural proportion.

When these important foundations are in place, the skin behaves differently. Collagen fibers are stronger, elasticity is improved, recovery times are shortened, and results last longer. Most importantly, the outcomes are natural.

Patients still look like themselves, only fresher, more radiant, and more confident. That’s the goal.

This approach delivers results that not only are visible quickly, but also stand the test of time. When the internal systems are functioning well, the skin responds more efficiently, healing is faster, and the effects of treatments are longer-lasting and more natural.

Less is always more

In today’s fast-paced aesthetic industry, the temptation to over-treat is everywhere. But more isn’t always better. In fact, one of the biggest threats to sustainable outcomes is what I call medicalized perfectionism, the belief that a series of procedures can override poor health habits. They can’t.

When cortisol is chronically elevated, when blood sugar is unstable, when the diet drives inflammation, and sleep is compromised, even the most advanced injectables will underdeliver. The skin simply can’t perform optimally under biological stress. True skin vitality comes from within. When the nervous system is regulated, detoxification pathways are working efficiently, and cellular energy production is supported, the skin reflects that internal equilibrium.

Patients don’t just look better; they genuinely feel better. Their energy improves, their mood stabilizes, and their skin glows with real, not artificial, health. These aren’t just wellness trends; they’re core physiological processes the body recognizes and thrives on.

That’s the true power of modern longevity aesthetics: a synergy between medicine and lifestyle, between science and daily habits.

Choosing your doctor

Patients today are becoming more discerning, and rightly so. They’re asking more informed questions: Who is administering my treatment? What is their training? Is this plan aligned with my individual biology? These are essential questions, and they deserve thoughtful, transparent answers.

Choose a practitioner who offers a long-term strategy, not a quick fix – a doctor who knows when to say no, who sees the bigger picture, and who values subtlety, safety, and sustainability over trends and hype.

The best compliment you can receive after a treatment isn’t, “What did you have done?” It’s, “You look like yourself, well-rested, healthy, and refreshed.” That’s the hallmark of aesthetic medicine done right.

Ultimately, longevity aesthetics isn’t about turning back time. It’s about aging with intention, preserving what’s uniquely you, while supporting your body through every stage of life. When wellness leads and technology supports, beauty becomes something you embody, not something you chase.

GRAB A COPY OF OUR LATEST LONGEVITY

This article, and many others, can be found in our latest “Back to the Earth” edition.

From expert insights with Dr. Zach Bush, Dr. Ash Kapoor, Oscar Chalupsky, Dr. Ela Manga, Dr. Maureen Allem, Dr. Anushka Reddy, Dr. Des Fernandes, Dr. Craige Golding, and many more, this issue explores everything from food, clean beauty, sustainable living, fashion, travel, and other mindful choices.

While available nationally in Southern Africa at your nearest Woolworths, Exclusive Books, and selectively at Superspar, Pick’n Pay, Airport lounges, and your local garage shop, you can also buy a digital copy at Zinio.com.

Dr. Maureen Allem

Dr. Maureen Allem

Dr Maureen Allem, the founder and Medical Director of the Renewal Institute, consults at the Parkhurst, Morningside, Fourways, and Waterfall branches in Gauteng and the Cape Quarter, Constantia, and Claremont branches in the Western Cape. She is a general practitioner with a special interest in aesthetic and integrative/anti-ageing medicine and procedures. She also trains all the new doctors and oversees each branch by rotationally traveling between them. Dr Maureen qualified as a medical doctor in 1987. Following a ten-year career in the conventional medical profession, running a medical ward in a provincial hospital, she moved into the executive health field and spent seven years doing annual medicals and lifestyle assessments for top executives nationally. In early 2001, Dr Maureen became increasingly interested in non-surgical aesthetics and the use of non-invasive treatments to rejuvenate the face and body and started an aesthetic practice doing Botox and Dermal Fillers for patients. As there was limited formal training available in this new medical field, she traveled to Belgium in 2002 to train with Dr Koen de Boulle, who is considered a top injector in Europe. On her return, she was invited by Genop Healthcare (the local distributors of Botox and Juvederm), to train other medical doctors in this new discipline. She was one of the first doctors in South Africa to do so and during this period trained many doctors on basic and advanced Botox and filler procedures. After attending Solal's introductory lecture on anti-ageing by Dr Terry Grossman from Denver, Colorado in 2001, Dr Maureen developed a keen interest in anti-ageing/integrative medicine and realized the importance of conditions that contribute to ageing and a decline in health. During the wellness medicals for executives, she incorporated anti-ageing recommendations into all her consultations and was asked to present a talk on anti-ageing/integrative medicine in 2003. In mid-2005, after attending the World Anti-ageing and Aesthetic Congress in Monaco, she purchased her first Cutera laser platform and opened up her first aesthetic center - Renewal Institute in Rivonia - offering anti-ageing injectables, peels, lasers, the Slender Wonder weight loss program, and other cutting-edge therapies such as transdermal mesotherapy and carboxytherapy. In 2006, she was invited by Allergan to attend a forum about Botox, in Spain, for top injectors in Europe and Africa. In the same year, she became one of the founding committee members of the AAMSSA (Aesthetic and Anti-Ageing Medicine Society of South Africa). Realizing that the physical appearance is only one part of the total picture of health and that it’s very important to address the inside as well as the outside of the human body, Dr Maureen started to offer a holistic approach to anti-ageing. As a result, Health Renewal, a functional and integrative approach to medicine was launched in September 2013. She has highly trained medical doctors working with her using the same techniques she has spent years honing. She frequently travels all over the world attending World Anti-ageing Congresses and Laser Forums to stay abreast of the most up-to-date non-surgical procedures. She is a sought-after speaker on anti-ageing and non-surgical facial rejuvenation techniques and body sculpting. She also has appeared on TV and radio many times discussing non-surgical aesthetic solutions and her advice can be read frequently in South Africa’s major publications. She was also part of the team that was responsible for integrating health renewal into the majority of the Renewal Institute centers across South Africa. Doctors at the Renewal Institute investigate the condition of the patient, establish if there are any underlying diseases, and correct deficiencies before dis "ease” sets in. The Renewal Institute has come a long way since it was first launched in 2005. It has grown to incorporate renewal in skin, body, health, hair, and sleep as well as the Oasis Spa and the online store. There are now 16 centers across South Africa’s major cities and four Oasis Spas. In 2009, the Renewal Institute entered into a postgraduate bursary and trainee program with the International Skin and Beauty Academy and Isa Carstens Beauty Academy, providing bursaries to underprivileged therapists, who have achieved excellent academic standards in the first two years of their studies. In addition, each year the company "adopts" a welfare organization to assist. She is a Founding Member of the AASSA (Aesthetic and Anti-aging Society of South Africa), a Member of WOOSAM, and is HPCSA registered. Dr Maureen is interested in research on new aesthetic and functional/integrative medicine, reading, travel, bridge, interior decorating, and garden landscaping. She lives with her partner, Victor, and has two grown-up children, Peter, who lives in London, and a daughter, Catherine, who lives and works in Johannesburg South Africa: https://www.skinrenewal.co.za/staff/doctors/dr-maureen-allem

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