Sheree Moko Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery

Sheree Moko Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery Sheree Moko Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery We are a short distance from Coolangatta Airport, serving the Gold Coast, Queensland, New South Wales and beyond.

Surgical Expertise and Genuine Care

As a female Plastic Surgeon practising on the Gold Coast, I can offer a woman's perspective combined with genuine care, surgical expertise and experience for a wide range of plastic and reconstructive procedures. My highly trained team is committed to providing excellent service in a discreet and professional manner before, during and after your surgery, as well as performing a variety of non-surgical procedures and delivering evidence-based skin care. My rooms are conveniently located with ample parking at Level 10 - The Rocket, 203 Robina Town Centre Drive, Robina - close to Robina Train Station, Robina Hospital and Robina Town Centre.

Wishing everyone a Merry Christmas and Joyous New Year for 2024-2025. We will be closed from 12.30pm Friday 20 December ...
17/12/2024

Wishing everyone a Merry Christmas and Joyous New Year for 2024-2025. We will be closed from 12.30pm Friday 20 December 2024 and returning at 8.30am Monday 6 January 2025. Thank you to everyone for their support during the year and hoping you enjoy the break with your family and friends. Take care from the Sheree Moko Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery Team.

Reckless: Surgeons warn health ministers that cosmetic cowboy reforms will failThe changes are dangerous and patients wi...
14/04/2023

Reckless: Surgeons warn health ministers that cosmetic cowboy reforms will fail
The changes are dangerous and patients will pay the price, they say.
Surgeons say an endorsement model for accrediting cosmetic surgeons will fail to stop unscrupulous doctors from operating on patients.
Health ministers last month agreed to the reforms as part of a suite of changes aimed at tightening up the cosmetic surgery industry following a spate of high-profile cases of patients being harmed.
Under the model now being set up by the Australian Medical Council (AMC), a new category of practitioners will be able to receive an ‘endorsement to practice’ cosmetic surgery.
The idea is to grant it only to those doctors who had undertaken a specific qualification approved by the Medical Board of Australia.
However medical groups including the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons (RACS) and the Australasian Society of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons (ASAPS) want it scrapped.
“What the AMC is doing is, rather than enforcing their own rules of surgical training, they are creating an alternative pathway that rewards those who have chosen to ignore the recognised surgical qualification in Australia,” said Dr Timothy Edwards, ASAPS president.
“This is dangerous, and patients pay the price.
“Calling for an independent standard for cosmetic surgery is incredibly reckless.
“Why should cosmetic surgery have any lesser standards than all other forms of surgery, where lives are permanently changed by a procedure?”
He said if the AMC introduces a cosmetic surgery training program for surgeons other than plastic surgeons, he would have no objection — so long as it occurred under the umbrella of the surgeons college and led to a FRACS.
“Now we have the ridiculous scenario of the AMC and AHPRA trying to invent an ‘endorsement’ for cosmetic surgery, one that does not hold the FRACS as a prerequisite.”
ASAPS, along with five other medical groups, have penned an open letter calling for an “an urgent rethink”.
It comes as the AMC finalises new standards for the endorsement model.
But Dr Edwards said the council’s draft standards were short on detail, including who will supervise the doctors and how they will get hands-on experience.

Australia’s health regulator has announced a review of patient safety issues in the cosmetic sector, after decades of de...
18/03/2022

Australia’s health regulator has announced a review of patient safety issues in the cosmetic sector, after decades of devastating patient harm at the hands of “cosmetic surgeons”. The review is a long overdue first step, but there is a long way to go before true reform takes place.

The Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency already has the power to crack down on cosmetic cowboys, as proven in the case of Dr Daniel Aronov, who has been banned from cosmetic medical and surgical procedures.
The question is, why isn’t AHPRA applying this level of discernment to all practitioners? And why won’t they take a preventative approach, rather than waiting for complaints and media attention to force their hand?

To truly protect Australian patients from harm, AHPRA must provide clear guidance around how it will monitor and regulate practitioners. The regulator mentions it will be updating the codes of conduct and guidance for cosmetic procedures, but there is no reference to how they actually plan on monitoring what practitioners are doing.

One clear solution is banning the use of medical titles that do not directly align with existing AHPRA titles or registration categories, and forcing practitioners to disclose the AHPRA category under which they are registered.
Up until now, AHPRA’s “regulation” has deprived patients of the ability to make fully informed treatment choices, thanks to the continuing deception embedded in the rogue title of “cosmetic surgeon”. It is all too easy for practitioners from non-surgical backgrounds to hide their lack of specialist surgical registration behind deceptive titles and references to academically bankrupt training organisations.

As a result, cosmetic surgery patients – mostly women – are continuously put at risk, leaving them with life-threatening injuries and life-long deformities.

The Four Corners program on cosmetic surgery, a joint venture with The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age that aired in October, shocked the nation. More media reports that followed in quick succession confirmed the scale of the problem.

One woman described yelling “what have you done to me?” at her cosmetic surgeon after her lung was punctured during liposuction. As recently as 2008 and 2013, two patients died at the hands of cosmetic “surgeons”, and one of these doctors is still practising. Not to mention the cosmetic surgeon who removed a 13-year-old girl’s l***a.

These are not isolated events. Specialist plastic surgeons see them on a regular basis when patients come to us in need of corrective surgery after their lives have been permanently altered by these non-specialist practitioners.

Despite specialist plastic surgeons reporting these horror stories to AHPRA for years, it sits on its hands. In March, the Australasian Society of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons made a voluntary notification to AHPRA, urging them to do what they are supposed to do: regulate.

There are key differences between a specialist plastic surgeon and a rogue practitioner. Specialist plastic surgeons have an additional eight to 12 years of training that’s assessed and accredited by the Australian Medical Council. It’s a robust standard of training and care that ensures good patient outcomes and prioritises patient safety by minimising risk.

Specialist surgeons are prepared to decline treatment when they believe it’s not in the patient’s best interest, and only perform major procedures in a hospital setting. They will keep patients in hospital overnight when same-day surgery is deemed unsafe, ensuring patients receive around-the-clock care and comprehensive after-care.

Many cosmetic “surgeons” do not have access to quality overnight hospital care for patients. Instead, the ongoing treatment to correct harm, save lives, and help patients recover is often dumped on the public hospital system at considerable cost to taxpayers.

If someone wants to see a medical professional whose surgical credentials – or lack thereof – are not recognised in Australia, that is their choice. But it must be an informed choice. Australians should be free from harm and deception – that’s what a health regulator and state health departments are there to ensure.

AHPRA’s much-delayed decision to finally review its checks and balances will come too late for some, but for thousands more Australians, change can’t come soon enough. The solution is simple: regulators and governments must compel practitioners to disclose their registration status to patients, and practitioners must tell the truth about their qualifications.

This article was written by Dr Robert Sheen, President of the Australasian Society of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons

‘Surgical training was cosmetic’ MAX MADDISON When Brittany Johnson arrived at the hospital with a sharp pain in her rig...
16/02/2021

‘Surgical training was cosmetic’
MAX MADDISON
When Brittany Johnson arrived at the hospital with a sharp pain in her right breast, she felt as though her chest was about to burst.
In April last year, five years after the 29-year-old underwent cosmetic surgery at The Cosmetic Institute, she raced to the emergency department, worried that she couldn’t raise her right arm; her breast had doubled in size.
Ms Johnson is just one of thousands of women who underwent cosmetic surgery at one of TCI’s “factories” across NSW and Queensland, in what she describes as a “production line” of young “naive” women such as herself, fooled by glitzy marketing on the company’s social media, and ostensibly low cost.
The Cosmetic Institute and director Eddy Dona are facing a class action from more than 1000 women, including Ms Johnson. The company is alleged to have allowed general doctors with little-to-no surgical training to undertake procedures.
Ms Johnson said it was “ridiculous” such conduct could happen in Australia. “I was another dollar figure,” she said. “I didn’t have that time to sit on it and think. It was like give me your deposit. Let’s get in there and get it done.”
It was only after a consultation with plastic surgeon Amira Sanki that the executive assistant realised the extent of the issue: her right breast had filled up with 550ml of fluid, part of a “waterfall deformity”. The initial surgery had been botched, done by someone with allegedly one weekend
of surgical training. Her “cosmetic surgeon” was Van Nguyen, one of 10 medical practitioners with limited surgical qualifications who operated on women like Ms Johnson, under the supervision of registered plastic surgeon Mr Dona.
Sitting in Dr Sanki’s consultation room in Kogarah, in Sydney’s south, Ms Johnson has spent the past year preparing for corrective surgery to repair the damage. While the initial surgery cost $5999, the eventual bill will be in excess of $20,000. But Ms Johnson said she was one of the lucky ones.
Court documents allege one patient, Kylie Po***ck, suffered four seizures after undergoing breast augmentation surgery at the hands of Dr Nguyen in 2014, while another, Amy Rickhuss, needed to be resuscitated after undergoing surgery in 2015. Dr Dona and Dr Nguyen deny any wrongdoing.
Dr Sanki said she sees at least one woman a month who has undergone inappropriate surgery.
Each “cosmetic surgeon” allegedly paid the clinic $500,000 over three years to perform the breast augmentation surgeries. Despite the outlay, each doctor was able to turn a profit by taking a cut of each procedure.
Sally Gleeson, a solicitor with Turner Freeman Lawyers, which is bringing the class action, said. “It’s disappointing that the industry is not regulated. Anyone who completes medical school with basic training can go ahead and operate. Surely that needs to be addressed.”

Return to ordinary business hoursSheree Moko Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery returns to ordinary business hours Monda...
26/11/2020

Return to ordinary business hours
Sheree Moko Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery returns to ordinary business hours Monday – Friday 8:30am – 4:30pm operating in a COVID-19 safe environment. Please contact the rooms on 07 5580 9244 for any enquiries.

Coronavirus Change of Business HoursAs a result of the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, Sheree Moko Plastic and Reconstr...
02/04/2020

Coronavirus Change of Business Hours

As a result of the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, Sheree Moko Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery has altered its business hours. New business hours are Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays from 8:30am to 4:30pm effective 3 April 2020. The clinic will be unattended outside of the amended hours. We ask for your cooperation and understanding as we navigate our way through this pandemic. Stay safe.

01/04/2020

26 March 2020
ASPS Communication about government ban on non-urgent elective surgery
The Australian Society of Plastic Surgeons is committed to patient safety and supports RACS and the
Commonwealth Government in their direction to cancel all non-urgent elective surgery.
As Specialist Plastic Surgeons we work across both public and private sectors with variable classification of
elective surgery types. The NATIONAL ELECTIVE SURGERY URGENCY CATEGORISATION (2015) is
very sparse in guidance for our specialty.
ASPS Council interpretation is that there should be:
• No cosmetic/discretionary surgery or revision
• Skin cancer surgery is Cat 1, but clinicians should consider deferring small lesions on
back/trunk/legs
• Most elective/cold hand surgery is Cat 3, but worsening nerve compression could be escalated to
“urgent Cat 2”
• Removal of ruptured breast implants is typically Cat 2 but would only be considered urgent if
causing significant pain or where there are grounds for concern for ALCL
• Major head and neck cancer surgery is Cat 1
• Other cancer excisions and reconstructions Cat 1 or 2 depending on local circumstances
• Time-critical paediatric procedures would normally be Cat 2 with urgency determined by local
clinicians and circumstances.
• No cosmetic injectables, laser or “medispa” procedures should be provided.
Trauma, infection and burns are emergency cases and should all be carried out as usual.
We are cogniscent of the risks to our members of providing long procedures and would advise against
these where at all possible. We are also aware that instrumentation of airways present risks to surgeons
but more often to anaesthetists. Every general anaesthetic that can be avoided may save the transmission of
COVID19 to an anaesthetist.
Consultations
Although there is currently no directive on medical consultations, ASPS is aware that face to face
consultations pose risks of transmission to both patients and surgeons. ASPS would therefore recommend:
• Carrying out telemedicine consultations in place of face to face consultations where feasible and
safe, particularly for follow-ups.
• All cosmetic face to face consultations should be cancelled or postponed
• Specialist Plastic Surgeons should consider minimizing the frequency of visits, especially for the
elderly and vulnerable. More “see and do" visits for consultation and LA excision of skin cancers
should be considered.

01/04/2020

COVID-19 update from Australian Society of Plastic Surgeons😷

10/03/2020

CORONAVIRUS (COVID-19) Client Information

As you may be aware, Australia is actively implementing controls to contain the spread of the Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19).

For the health and safety of our staff and our clients, we have temporary measures in place to limit the spread of the Coronavirus (COVID-19).

Before entering the clinic for an appointment please note;

You are advised that you must isolate yourself at home if:

You have left Hubei province, China less than 14 days ago (until 14 days after you left Hubei)

You have been identified as close contacts of proven cases of novel coronavirus (until 14 days after last contact with the confirmed case)

You have left, or transited through, mainland China on or after 1 February 2020 (until 14 days after leaving China)

Please:

Do not enter if you have a fever and one or more of runny nose, cough, headache, rash, vomiting, sore throat or diarrhoea

Take precautions to stop the spread of germs by covering your cough or sneeze

Clean your hands after coughing or sneezing

Please call us on 07 5580 9244 if you need to reschedule your appointment. If you require further information about the Coronavirus pandemic, you may contact the Commonwealth Public Health Information Line on 1800 004 599.

We have taken the simple step to request our visitors and staff to use the hand sanitisers provided at the front desk of Reception and in all our treatment rooms.

Thank you for your help.

Holiday hours 2019 - 2020Wishing everyone an enjoyable and relaxing festive season.  We will be closing Tuesday 24/12/20...
24/12/2019

Holiday hours 2019 - 2020
Wishing everyone an enjoyable and relaxing festive season. We will be closing Tuesday 24/12/2019 at 12:00pm and re-opening Thursday 02/01/2020 at 8:30am. Thanking you all for your support during the past year and wishing you all a prosperous New Year ahead.

10/12/2019

Rogue and unregistered Doctors set to face tougher penalties

Rogue and unregistered doctors will face tougher penalties with Australia’s Health Ministers agreeing to stamp out behaviour that risks patient safety.

16/09/2019

Breast Implant Information Update
Allergan textured Breast Implants no longer to be used
25 July 2019
Textured breast implants and tissue expanders made by Allergan are being recalled from sale globally.
These implants have been linked to anaplastic large-cell lymphoma (ALCL), which is a rare cancer of the immune system. It is not breast cancer, but can develop adjacent to a breast implant. In most cases, removing the implant and the capsule around it cures the disease. The main symptoms patients should be aware of are an unusual swelling and/or fluid accumulation in the breast or around the implant. If any of these symptoms occur please see your Specialist Plastic Surgeon. Your surgeon knows the details of your implants and will assess you and if appropriate perform tests which may include a biopsy or draining the fluid and sending it for specific testing. A delay in diagnosis has been shown to have poorer long term outcomes.
ALCL has occurred associated with implants placed both for cosmetic breast enlargement and with those used for reconstruction after mastectomy for breast cancer. It has also occurred in implants that are filled with silicone or saline. Whilst there are several hypotheses, why this texturing leads to cancer in some patients is not known.
The lymphoma is rare, given that millions of women have breast implants.
Women who have these implants, but no symptoms, do not need to have them removed. The recall means that doctors and hospitals should not implant any more of the devices and should return any on their shelves to Allergan.
“Patient safety is a priority for Allergan,” the company said in a statement, “and patients are advised to speak with their plastic surgeon about the risk and benefits of their implant type should they have any concerns.”
Although several companies make textured implants, a great majority of the lymphoma cases have occurred in women with the Allergan products and the Australian Society of Plastic Surgery supports their withdrawal from the market.

Address

Level 10, The Rocket, 203 Robina Town Centre Drive, Robina
Gold Coast, QLD
4226

Opening Hours

Monday 8:30am - 4:30pm
Tuesday 8:30am - 4:30pm
Wednesday 8:30am - 4:30pm
Thursday 8:30am - 4:30pm
Friday 8:30am - 4:30pm

Telephone

+61755809244

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