Reading Time: <1 minuteThe other day, there was a report that the doctor in charge of a fatal accident after liposuction at a cosmetic surgery clinic was referred to the prosecutor's office. https://news.yahoo.co.jp/articles/1024d00711a2347e47bf2c1cfa2568d386deb190 There have been many fatal accidents caused by cosmetic surgery, but they have not been brought to light. Most of these are due to the lack of skills due to the doctor's immaturity and lack of experience. Cosmetic surgery clinics have proliferated all over the country. The reasons for this are that it is easy and profitable, popular with women, you can open your own practice immediately, and there is no need for strict and difficult training. There are unique circumstances in the industry that are far removed from the real medical world. You can become a director in six months. You can become a cosmetic surgery instructor in a few months. Even if you are not a doctor, you can understand how absurd the current situation is. Cosmetic surgeons need to observe the progress of the surgery and judge the results, so they need at least five years of experience, and ideally, a doctor with more than 10 years of experience in a significant number of cases as a cosmetic surgeon can perform surgery at a level that allows them to somehow stand on their own in clinical practice. Recently, there are many medical institutions where nurses are performing the procedures themselves, which is a violation of the Medical Practitioners Act. Armpit odor treatment is one example of this. Body odor treatment should never be performed by anyone other than a doctor... Doctors rarely examine the body, and everything is done by nurses, which not only has no effect, but also leads to a constant stream of patients coming to the hospital with severe burns. Body odor treatment is not hair removal, but a medical procedure aimed at treating a clear disease. This is a treatment that should absolutely be performed by a doctor. I am surprised at the current situation where so many clinics leave everything to nurses when it comes to MiraDry. If there are any doctors who think that nurses should do it, I would love to discuss it. I have performed over 1,500 body odor surgeries and over 10,000 body odor treatments in my 34 years as a cosmetic surgeon. The current situation is abnormal, with doctors who have never treated body odor other than MiraDry leaving all treatment to nurses.