Injectable

Neurotoxin (Botox)

Consultations and signed medical directives for neurotoxin (botox) — also known as wrinkle-relaxing / neuromodulator injectables.

About neurotoxin (botox)

Neurotoxin injectables — commonly known by brand names such as Botox® — are among the most requested treatments in medical aesthetics. Because they’re delivered by an injector under a supervising medical director, each treatment typically needs a directive on file before it’s performed.

What the injector submits

  • Treatment areas planned for this visit
  • Photos of the area(s)
  • Allergies, medical conditions, and contraindications
  • Current medications
  • Any prior reactions noted by the client

How the medical director reviews

The director sees the full case and decides on this treatment — approve, decline with a reason, or request a live consult. Approved treatments are authorized with a signed directive recorded against the patient.

Neurotoxin is often a repeat treatment, so a standing directive with auto-approval can keep returning clients moving quickly — while still notifying the medical director each time.

Standing directives for neurotoxin (botox)

When the medical director allows it, an approval can stay valid for a set window. A returning client for the same treatment can be cleared automatically under that directive — and the director is always notified. The director sets the policy, per injector.

This page describes how InjecTeam documents and reviews treatments. It is not medical advice. Treatments are performed only by qualified professionals under their own clinical judgement and regulatory obligations.

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