RBC Safety Protocol™

Safety First, Always

We’re the team that will say “No” when it isn’t safe.

Safety-led decisions for international patients, before any dates are confirmed. If suitability or recovery timing is not yet clear, we slow down first.

Safety at RBC means more than surgery day

For us, safety is not just about the procedure itself. It also includes suitability, timing, privacy, recovery planning, and follow-up after you return home.
That is why we do not confirm dates until the case, the timeline, and the recovery plan are clear.

What makes RBC safety different

No upselling ever.

If a procedure is not necessary, not advisable, or not in your best interest, we will not recommend it or proceed even if requested.
When something is better delayed, adjusted, or avoided, we explain why and guide you toward the safer next step.

The 6 Safety Checkpoints

01

Intake & Privacy Check

We collect only what is needed to assess suitability. Your photos and medical details are handled confidentially and shared only on a need-to-know basis for your care.

02

Surgeon-Led Suitability Review

A board-certified plastic surgeon reviews your case for suitability and key safety considerations before any dates are confirmed.

03

Risk Flags & Clearance Path

If anything raises concern—such as medical history, medications, or smoking status—we slow down and guide the next step: additional clearance or a safer timeline.

04

Recovery-First Timeline

We build your Bangkok timeline around recovery needs, not convenience. If a timeline is not safe, we do not compress it.

05

Clear Expectations

You receive clear guidance on what is appropriate and what the safest next steps are—so you can make decisions calmly, without pressure.

06

Ongoing Follow-Up

We stay connected after you return home with structured follow-ups, so you are not left navigating recovery alone.

What we review

Before confirming dates

Before confirming any surgery dates, we review factors that may affect safety, timing, or recovery, including

01

Medical history that may affect anesthesia or surgery

02

Current medications and supplements

03

Smoking status and other recovery-impact factors

04

Any red flags that may require clearance or a slower timeline

Privacy is part of safety

Your photos and medical details are confidential and shared only on a need-to-know basis for your care.
We never use patient images for marketing without explicit permission.

FAQ

What happens if I’m not suitable for surgery right now?

We’ll explain why, slow down the timeline, and guide you toward the safer next step—whether that means additional clearance, a different plan, or waiting until the timing is better.

Outcomes vary based on anatomy, healing, and individual expectations. The treating surgeon leads clinical decisions and sets what is realistic for your case. RBC supports you throughout by helping align expectations early, following up on progress, and coordinating the right next steps with the medical team if concerns arise. You won’t be left figuring it out alone.

If any concerns arise, clinical care and medical responsibility are led by the treating surgeon and facility. RBC stays by your side by coordinating communication, helping arrange follow-up appointments, and guiding next steps with calm, clear support—including language support when needed.

Who makes the final medical decision—RBC or the surgeon?

Clinical decisions are led by the treating surgeon and facility. RBC coordinates the safety workflow, communication, and follow-ups around your care.

Your photos and medical details are confidential and shared only on a need-to-know basis for your care. We never use patient images for marketing without explicit permission.

No. We do not upsell. If a procedure is not necessary or not in your best interest, we will not recommend it—or proceed—even if requested.

Ready for a calm,

safety-first plan?

Start with a confidential assessment, and we’ll guide you step by step.