
The Practice
Oasis Aesthetics.
Subtle, expert aesthetic results from a nurse-practitioner-led practice.
§ I·Our point of view
Aesthetic medicine is clinical work. We treat it that way.
Most medical spas are marketing businesses with clinical licenses. The product is aspiration — transformation, radiance, your best version — and the treatments are incidental to that sell. We are not interested in that model.
Aesthetic injectables work best when the person holding the needle understands facial anatomy at a clinical level, has the professional restraint to recommend less rather than more, and treats the consultation as a medical visit rather than a sales appointment. That is what you will find here.
NP-led · Conservative technique · No before/after rotators · No upselling
§ II·The treatment index
What each treatment does. What it does not.
Six treatments. Each explained at the level of detail a patient deserves before agreeing to a procedure.
01
Treatment · I
Neuromodulators
Botox, Dysport, and Xeomin are neurotoxins that temporarily interrupt the nerve signal to a specific muscle, softening the repeated contraction that creates dynamic lines — the furrow between the brows, horizontal forehead lines, crow's feet. They do not fill, plump, or restructure tissue; they relax movement. The distinction matters because patients often arrive expecting a filler-level result and leave disappointed when the forehead simply moves less. What they should expect: a cleaner, less-strained version of their own face. Ideal for adults who have noticed that their lines persist when the face is at rest. Not appropriate as a preventive measure in patients under 25 who have no visible lines — a conservative approach that is not universal in this industry but is standard here. Onset is 3–7 days; full effect at 14 days; duration 3–4 months depending on musculature and metabolism.
02
Treatment · II
Dermal Fillers
Hyaluronic acid fillers — Juvéderm, Restylane, the RHA collection — restore volume that has migrated or resorbed, and add structural support to areas that have lost projection. Common sites: nasolabial folds, marionette lines, mid-face volume, lips, and jawline definition. What fillers do not do: fix skin texture, stop aging, or compensate for poor skin health. The most common injector error in this category is over-volume — patients who return every 12 months for more product without any dissolution of old product accumulate unnatural bulk that is far more visible than the original concern. This practice dissolves on a schedule. Every filler patient is assessed at 12 months; if existing product is adequate, no new product is placed. Duration varies by formulation: lip filler averages 6–9 months; mid-face filler 12–18 months; structural jawline filler up to 24 months.
03
Treatment · III
Lip Enhancement
Lip filler occupies a different clinical conversation than facial volumizing. The lips are the feature most associated with over-done aesthetic results in public perception, which has made many patients reluctant to pursue even a modest, appropriate treatment. A lip that needs help is typically one that has lost definition at the vermilion border, or one that was always thin in proportion to the rest of the face and the patient has simply lived with it. Enhancement here means restoring or adding definition — a visible border, modest central volume, appropriate hydration. It does not mean adding maximum product to reach a given measurement. This practice routinely turns away patients requesting lip sizes that are anatomically disproportionate. A half-syringe is often the correct amount; starting with a full syringe in a first-time patient is rarely appropriate regardless of what other practices offer.
04
Treatment · IV
Microneedling with PRF
Microneedling creates controlled micro-injuries in the dermis to stimulate collagen and elastin production — the skin's own repair mechanism. When combined with platelet-rich fibrin (PRF) derived from the patient's own blood draw, growth factor concentration at the treated site increases substantially. The result over a series of three treatments spaced four weeks apart: improved skin texture, reduction of fine surface lines, minimized pore appearance, and in some patients a meaningful improvement in acne scarring. This is not a single-session treatment; patients who expect visible change from one session will not achieve it. It is also not a filler substitute — it does not restore lost volume, it improves the quality of existing skin. Ideal candidates: patients in their 30s–50s with textural concerns, early photoaging, or acne scarring. Contraindicated in active acne breakout, blood-thinning medications, or current use of isotretinoin.
05
Treatment · V
Chemical Peels
Chemical peels are acid-based treatments that induce controlled exfoliation at varying skin depths depending on formulation and concentration. Light peels (lactic, glycolic, mandelic) work at the stratum corneum level — mild resurfacing, suitable every 4–6 weeks, essentially no recovery. Medium-depth peels (TCA, Jessner) reach the upper dermis; expect 5–7 days of peeling and temporary photosensitivity. Deep peels are performed selectively here and not as a routine offering — they require significant recovery and are appropriate only for specific photoaging presentations. Peels are adjunctive treatments, not primary rejuvenation. They perform best as part of a consistent skincare protocol rather than as one-off events. Patients who arrive for a single pre-event peel with no existing skincare practice are counseled toward a lighter treatment at a more appropriate timeline.
06
Treatment · VI
Medical-Grade Skincare Consult
Over-the-counter skincare is a multi-billion dollar industry that sells hope with limited evidence and almost no clinical oversight. Patients arrive with collections of products, many of which conflict with each other, contain insufficient active concentrations to produce results, or address the wrong concern entirely. A skincare consult at this practice is a clinical analysis: skin type assessment, barrier function evaluation, current product review, and a prescription-level regimen recommendation where appropriate. Products carried here — SkinMedica, Alastin, ZO Skin Health — are medical-grade, meaning active concentrations are validated and supply chains are controlled. This is not a retail upsell; patients who come in with a functioning regimen that matches their concerns are told so. The goal is the right regimen, not the most expensive one.

Portrait · 01
§ III·Meet your injector
Renee Park
MSN, NP-C, CANS
Renee spent seven years as an emergency department RN before completing her NP and pursuing advanced injectable training. She holds a Certificate of Advanced Nursing Skills in aesthetics (CANS) and has performed over 4,000 injectable treatments. She does not hire injectors. Every needle is hers.
Experience
8+ years injecting
Background
7 years ER nursing
§ IV·Standards
What we won't do.
Restraint is clinical practice. These are the lines we hold.
01
Follow influencer trend cycles. Pillow cheeks, brow lifts via filler, and exaggerated lip architecture are clinical decisions, not aesthetic statements. When a trend conflicts with facial anatomy, the trend loses.
02
Rush a consultation. First appointments are 45 minutes. If you are not a candidate for what you requested, you will hear that before any product is used.
03
Add product when existing product is adequate. Stacking filler on top of prior filler without periodic dissolution creates cumulative distortion. A good injector tracks what they placed and when.
04
Present before/after photography as a guarantee. Results vary with anatomy, metabolism, skin quality, and lifestyle. Photography is documentation, not a promise.
05
Treat under inadequate supervision parameters. This practice operates under a collaborating physician arrangement with a board-certified plastic surgeon. Treatment scope stays within that arrangement.
06
Upsell during the appointment. If you came in for one area, you will not leave with a treatment plan for four. Additional recommendations, if warranted, are offered at a separate consultation.
§ V·First-visit guide
What happens at a first consultation.
A real account of a real visit, in order.
Intake review
You complete a medical history form before your visit. Renee reviews it in advance — the appointment starts at conversation, not paperwork.
Facial assessment
Photographs are taken under standardized lighting for clinical documentation. Renee walks through what she observes and what she thinks the appropriate treatment address would be — including what she would leave alone.
Honest candidacy conversation
If you are a candidate for what you requested, you hear a specific recommendation with product names, amounts, and anatomical rationale. If you are not, you hear that too. Not every consultation ends in a treatment.
Treatment (if proceeding)
Topical numbing where appropriate. Treatment takes 15–45 minutes depending on area. You remain in the room with Renee for a brief post-treatment observation period before leaving.
Written aftercare + follow-up
Aftercare instructions are sent by text before you leave the building. A 2-week check-in is scheduled for injectable treatments. Concerns in the meantime reach Renee directly — not a front desk.
§ VI·The build
Included in the site.
Hover any item to see the operational friction it removes.
- Per-treatment pricingSticker question answered before they call.
- Before/after gallery slotsOutcome proof front-and-center.
- Per-service bookingPatients book the exact treatment without a sales call.
- Membership & packagesRecurring revenue baked into the page.
- Skincare product shop readyRetail sales while the doors are closed.
- Gift card supportGifting drives off-peak revenue.
§ VII·Begin
Begin with a consultation.
Not a treatment. A conversation. Forty-five minutes to determine whether treatment is appropriate, what it would involve, and what to expect.