non-invasive aesthetic medicine
Born from a meeting between Manon Rouas, psychotherapist, Olivier Maison, hair transplant practitioner, and Gustin Hocine, dedicated to the relationship between patients and clinics, Maison Marignan has given itself the mission of beautifying with non-invasive techniques, using injections or even hair transplants, without incisions, without scars, his specialty, without forgetting his painless permanent laser hair removal.
Maison Marignan wishes to provide the tools to repair loss of trust and violent complexes, detecting dysmorphophobia in order to best guide patients. “With the Covid phenomenon, we see patients who want to feel beautiful and enjoy life. They pass the course, especially when the complexes cause insomnia and generate suffering ”, indicates Manon Rouas, CEO and partner of Maison Marignan, and to add: “We partner with surgeons if the needs are too great. Maison Marignan is an aesthetic medicine clinic, not surgery”.
A human dimension to overcome difficulties
Along with this aesthetic experience, Maison Marignan adopts a very human policy. “If the requests are initially narcissistic, the patients need to be listened to and accompanied, precisely because they are going through a period of doubts”, says Manon Rouas. Therefore, patients come to the consultation to share their project and their feelings, later in the postoperative period. The latter benefit from a follow-up for a year and a half every three months where each member of the clinic can be reached 7 days a week.
A committed care facility, Maison Marignan wants to put many people at the heart of the clinic. C’est d’ailleurs pour cela qu’elle crée avec le chirurgien réparateur, le Docteur Benjamin Sarfati, la Maison Noé, una clinique dediée aux patients atteints de un cancer qui proposing a complete panel qui associe soins esthétiques, psychologiques et bien- be. For example, recreating the mammary areola for breast cancer, or even directed physiotherapy sessions. “We need places where people can feel alive,” concludes Manon Rouas.
Today, non-invasive treatments are attractive. According to a study by the IMCAS Tribune, the global market is expected to reach $1.2 trillion by the end of the year. A trend that is no longer so and tends to become more human in order to respond to the problem of self-image.
This content was produced in association with OpenMedias. The BFM Business editorial team was not involved in the production of this content.
Source: BFM TV
