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Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

AAI Academy is an intelligence-driven education platform focused on aesthetics, regenerative therapies, wellness, predictive health, and performance sciences.

Our programs are designed to create future-ready professionals through evidence-informed learning, practical exposure, and real-world application.

AAI Academy does not teach cosmetic skills in isolation.

We focus on intelligence-based education, which includes:

Biological & functional understanding
Predictive and preventive thinking
Ethical and outcome-driven practice
Integration of technology, wellness, and performance
This makes our programs globally relevant and clinically meaningful.

Some AAI programs may be offered with or without university affiliation, depending on the course.

AAI’s exclusive programs are independently designed, certified by AAI Academy, and structured to meet industry and professional standards.

Eligibility varies by program:

Doctors & medical professionals (MBBS / MD / MS / BAMS / BHMS)
Ayurveda practitioners
Paramedical professionals
Fitness, wellness, and allied health professionals
Entrepreneurs and non-medical professionals (for selected programs)
Each course page clearly mentions eligibility.

Most AAI programs follow a hybrid model:

Online live & recorded sessions (theory, case discussions)
Hands-on workshops / practical exposure
Assignments, case studies, and assessments
This allows flexibility without compromising quality.

All courses are taught in English.

Support material or explanations may be provided where required for better understanding.

Yes.

AAI courses are structured step-by-step, starting from fundamentals and progressing to applied intelligence and practice.

No prior aesthetics or wellness experience is mandatory unless specified.

AAI courses provide:

Skill development
Clinical and applied understanding
Ethical and safety-based frameworks

Actual practice rights depend on:

Your basic qualification
Local regulatory guidelines
Scope of practice applicable to your profession

Yes, wherever applicable.

Hands-on exposure includes:

Case-based learning
Device or protocol demonstrations
Practical workshops (for relevant courses)

Assessment methods may include:

Online MCQs / written assessments
Case study submissions
Practical evaluations
Viva or presentations
Each course clearly defines its assessment structure.

Yes.

Successful candidates receive an AAI Academy Certificate for the respective program, confirming:

Course completion
Training hours
Learning outcomes achieved

Depending on the course, graduates may work as:

Aesthetic & wellness professionals
Preventive health consultants
Fitness & performance advisors
Clinic or wellness center team members
Independent consultants or entrepreneurs
AAI focuses on career readiness, not just certification.

Yes.

AAI Academy programs are designed with global relevance, hybrid access, and universally applicable concepts.

Ask yourself honestly:

  • Do I want to only perform procedures, or do I want to manage outcomes?
  • Am I comfortable handling uncertain results and patient expectations?
  • Do I want this as a side skill or a serious clinical vertical?

If the intention is clear, choosing the right training becomes easier.

Not just “how to do a peel or injection.”

You should be learning:

  • How to assess a patient beyond the obvious concern
  • How to decide if treatment is even needed
  • How to plan multiple sessions logically
  • How to handle when things don’t go as expected

If this is missing, the training will feel good during learning but difficult in practice.

Because training is often:

  • Demonstration-based
  • Ideal-case focused

Real patients are:

  • Mixed presentations
  • Unpredictable responses
  • Emotionally driven

The gap is not skill—it is decision clarity under uncertainty.

This is the most important decision.

Instead of asking:
“What all will they teach?”

Ask:

  • Will they teach me how to think, not just what to do?
  • Do they explain why one patient is treated differently from another?
  • Will I be able to practice independently after this?
  • Do they address mistakes, failures, and complications honestly?
  • Is there a structured system, or is it personality-driven teaching?

A good academy makes you less dependent, not more.

  • Too much focus on number of procedures
  • No discussion on patient selection
  • Everything looks easy and perfect
  • No clarity on what not to do
  • No structured way of thinking—only techniques

That usually leads to confusion later.

Procedures = skill
Practice = decision + timing + patient understanding

You can learn procedures in days.
Building a practice requires:

  • Judgment
  • Pattern recognition
  • Consistency

Training should move you toward practice readiness, not just exposure.

More than the treatment itself.

A well-selected patient with a basic treatment
often gives better results than
a poorly selected patient with the best technology.

If you get this right, half your problems reduce.

After the course, you should be able to answer:

  • When should I say no to a patient?
  • What is my first-line vs second-line plan?
  • How do I handle partial improvement?
  • How do I manage expectation mismatch?

If you don’t have clarity here, confidence will be shaky.

Because outcomes depend on:

  • Case selection
  • Timing
  • Combination planning
  • Patient behavior

Not just the treatment itself.

That’s why two doctors using the same method get completely different results.

It should:

  • Challenge your current thinking
  • Make you pause before acting
  • Give you a repeatable way to approach patients
  • Reduce your dependency on guesswork

You should come out thinking:
“Now I know how to approach cases,”
not just
“I have learned new procedures.”

You can’t eliminate it completely, but you can reduce it by:

  • Following a structured approach every time
  • Not jumping between treatments randomly
  • Understanding why something is working or not

The goal is not perfection—it is controlled decision-making.

The one that:

  • Gives you a thinking framework
  • Works across different cases
  • Helps you improve with experience

Not something that depends on:

  • One trainer’s style
  • One method
  • One type of patient

AAI is built around one core idea:

Helping doctors think clearly before they treat.

It focuses on:

  • Structured patient understanding
  • Clear decision pathways
  • Consistent approach to different cases

So instead of asking every time
“what should I do?”

You begin to know
“how to approach.”

  • Less confusion in patient handling
  • More clarity in treatment planning
  • Better communication with patients
  • More predictable outcomes over time

Not overnight transformation—but steady confidence.

“Will this make me dependent on more courses…
or capable of handling patients on my own?”

The answer to this decides everything.

Fees vary depending on the program and duration.

You can:

Register through the AAI Academy website
Submit an online application
Complete eligibility verification
Confirm enrollment upon acceptance

Closing Thought

Good training adds skills.
The right training changes how you see and approach every patient after that.