Hair Transplant Candidacy: Accreditation and Protocols
Understand what accreditation bodies verify, which clinical protocols protect you, and how to distinguish credible hair transplant facilities from high-risk operators before you commit.
Content is educational and planning-oriented. It does not replace diagnosis, treatment, or personalized medical advice from a licensed healthcare professional. Outcomes vary by individual case.
Hair transplant surgery sits at the intersection of cosmetic preference and clinical procedure — and the difference between a well-planned outcome and a preventable complication often comes down to whether you know what to look for in a provider's credentials and protocols before you commit.
Accreditation and protocol standards are not marketing badges. They are verifiable systems that a facility commits to maintaining under ongoing external review. When you understand what they mean — what they cover, what they miss, and how to check them — you gain something more valuable than a "qualified" label: you gain the ability to ask the right questions and interpret the answers honestly.
This guide walks through the accreditation landscape, clinical protocol standards, surgeon qualification frameworks, and the specific risk controls that evidence shows make a measurable difference in hair transplant safety. It also includes a practical checklist you can use when evaluating any clinic, whether in Istanbul or elsewhere.
Educational information only
This content is general education and does not replace evaluation by a licensed clinician. If you have symptoms, complications, or urgent concerns, seek in-person medical care.
Key takeaways
Accreditation verifies facility-level systems; individual surgeon certification verifies personal competency — both are important verification signals.
The physician must personally perform all critical surgical steps; technicians performing extraction or recipient site creation independently is a clear guideline violation.
Complication rates below 1% for infection are achievable in accredited, protocol-adherent facilities; life-threatening complications are extremely rare in structured settings.
ISHRS explicitly condemns marketing terms including 'scarless surgery,' 'guaranteed results,' 'unlimited grafts,' and 'zero downtime' — any provider using them is violating professional ethical standards.
In Istanbul, verify the clinic's health tourism licence, confirm the surgeon's specialty registration, and establish a postoperative escalation protocol before committing to surgery.
What Accreditation Means for Hair Transplant Safety
Before evaluating any clinic, it helps to understand what accreditation actually is — and equally important, what it is not. Patients frequently encounter multiple overlapping claims about credentials, standards, and certifications, and the confusion between them can be exploited.
Accreditation vs. Certification vs. Professional Membership
These three terms are often used interchangeably in marketing materials, but they describe fundamentally different things:
Accreditation is a facility-level designation. An independent third-party body — such as Joint Commission International (JCI) — evaluates a hospital or clinic against published standards covering patient safety, clinical processes, infrastructure, and governance. If a facility is accredited, it has undergone a formal survey and been found to meet those standards. Accreditation is voluntary in most countries, and it must be maintained through periodic resurvey.
Certification is an individual-level credential awarded to a practitioner who meets defined eligibility criteria — typically case volume, examination, and peer review. The American Board of Hair Restoration Surgery (ABHRS) is the most rigorous independent certification available for hair transplant surgeons, requiring 150 documented cases, a written examination, and an oral examination before diplomate status is awarded.
Professional membership means a practitioner or facility has joined a professional society, such as the International Society of Hair Restoration Surgery (ISHRS). Membership typically requires meeting minimum criteria and paying dues, but it is not itself a clinical certification or accreditation. Many fully qualified surgeons are not ISHRS members, and ISHRS membership alone does not guarantee superior outcomes.
Why this distinction matters
A clinic displaying a certificate on the wall may be showing a professional membership certificate — not an accreditation certificate. Ask specifically: "Is your facility accredited, and by whom?" Then verify that claim independently at the accrediting body's website.
Who Sets the Standards
The standards that govern hair transplant safety come from several distinct sources, each with a different scope:
ISHRS publishes clinical practice guidelines for FUE and FUT, maintains the ABHRS certification programme, issues consumer alerts on unsafe practices, and sets ethical advertising standards.
JCI publishes hospital accreditation standards covering patient safety goals, governance, clinical care, and facility management.
National governments set baseline licensing standards for healthcare facilities and practitioners. Turkey's 2023 Health Minister Permits Law, for example, explicitly prohibits unlicensed centres from performing hair transplant procedures.
Educational and training bodies such as medical boards and fellowship programmes define what competent practice looks like for individual practitioners.
No single body governs all aspects of hair transplant quality. Multiple independent verification layers — a surgeon's individual credentials, the facility's operating licence, any voluntary accreditation, and the clinical protocols in place — together give a more reliable picture than any single badge.
What Accreditation Actually Evaluates
When JCI evaluates a hospital, it assesses systems — not individual surgical outcomes. Specifically, JCI looks at:
How the facility identifies patients correctly and communicates effectively between staff
Whether medication safety, surgical safety, and infection control protocols are documented and followed
How the facility manages equipment, utilities, and physical safety risks
Whether staff are qualified, trained, and supervised appropriately
How adverse events are reported and analysed for quality improvement
JCI accreditation does not evaluate the cosmetic skill of individual surgeons or guarantee specific results. It verifies whether the facility has the systems, trained staff, and safety infrastructure to deliver care safely and consistently.
Limitations of Accreditation
Accreditation is a valuable signal, but it has real limits that patients should understand:
Voluntary in most markets: A clinic is not required to hold JCI accreditation. Many high-quality hair transplant facilities operate without it.
Survey snapshots: Accreditation reflects compliance at the time of the most recent survey. A facility's practices can deteriorate between surveys.
Dedicated hair transplant clinics and JCI: JCI accredits hospitals, not standalone outpatient clinics. A dedicated hair transplant clinic may operate to excellent standards without JCI accreditation simply because it is not a hospital. JCI-accredited dedicated hair transplant clinics are rare even in the US and Europe.
No guarantees: Accreditation verifies systems. It does not eliminate the possibility of individual practitioner error, technique complications, or adverse individual patient responses.
Accreditation is one input into your evaluation — not a pass/fail verdict on a clinic's suitability for you.
Major Accreditation Bodies and What They Evaluate
ISHRS (International Society of Hair Restoration Surgery)
The ISHRS is the primary global professional society for hair restoration surgeons. Founded in 1993, it has over 1,200 member physicians worldwide. Its key functions include publishing clinical practice guidelines for FUE and FUT, administering the ABHRS certification examination, issuing consumer alerts on unsafe practices, and setting ethical advertising standards.
ISHRS membership is voluntary. A surgeon who is not an ISHRS member may still be fully qualified through national board certification, hospital privileges, or other credentials. However, ISHRS membership is one positive signal among several, and the society's position statements and clinical guidelines represent the most widely accepted benchmarks in the field.
JCI (Joint Commission International)
JCI is the international arm of The Joint Commission, a US-based healthcare accreditation organization. JCI accreditation is the most widely recognized international hospital accreditation standard, evaluated across more than 70 countries.
For hair transplant specifically, JCI accreditation is most relevant when the procedure is performed within a JCI-accredited hospital. In that setting, the facility has demonstrated compliance with standards covering:
International Patient Safety Goals: correct patient identification, effective communication, medication safety, surgical safety (correct site, correct procedure, correct patient), infection control, and fall prevention
Facility management: physical plant safety, fire safety, medical equipment management, and utility reliability
Staffing: qualification requirements, continuing education, and supervision structures for trainees and assistants
Clinical standards: preoperative assessment, anaesthesia, surgical care, medication management, quality improvement, and adverse event reporting
A clinic operating within a JCI-accredited hospital has access to institutional resources — emergency department, blood bank, intensive care coverage — that an isolated outpatient clinic may lack.
Patients can verify JCI accreditation status at jointcommissioninternational.org before assuming a facility is accredited. Many clinics claim "JCI standards" or "JCI-level quality" without holding actual accreditation.
ABHRS (American Board of Hair Restoration Surgery)
The ABHRS is the only American Board of Medical Specialties (ABMS)-recognized certifying board specifically for hair transplant surgeons. It is the most rigorous independent individual certification available in the field.
The certification requirements are demanding:
A minimum of 150 documented hair transplant cases submitted for peer review
Successful completion of a written examination covering anatomy, physiology, surgical technique, complications, and ethics
Successful completion of an oral examination reviewing case documentation
A valid medical licence in good standing
Maintenance through 100 CME hours per 3-year cycle for recertification
If a surgeon holds ABHRS diplomate status, you can verify it through the ABHRS website. Many highly qualified surgeons — particularly internationally — have excellent training backgrounds through national plastic surgery or dermatology boards without pursuing ABHRS certification. ABHRS status should be considered one positive signal among several, not a sole criterion for selection.
Structured fellowship training programmes in hair restoration also represent a significant competency pathway, typically requiring 9–12 months of supervised training and a minimum number of cases.
National and Regional Equivalents
Beyond the international bodies above, national regulators in various countries set baseline facility and practitioner licensing standards:
Turkey: The 2023 Health Minister Permits Law requires hair transplant procedures to be performed by specialist physicians (dermatologists, plastic surgeons, or ENT surgeons with relevant training) in licensed facilities. Unlicensed beauty centres performing hair transplants are explicitly prohibited.
UAE: National regulators publish detailed frameworks covering facility specifications, sterilization spore-test records, emergency equipment, staff licensing, technician scope of practice, and preoperative assessment protocols. These frameworks serve as useful proxies for minimum standards in any market.
Other jurisdictions: Most countries have some form of medical practitioner licensing and facility registration. Patients travelling for surgery should identify the relevant national regulatory body and verify a provider's licence status before committing.
Surgeon Qualifications — Who Is Legitimately Credentialed
Accreditation tells you about the facility. Certification tells you about the individual surgeon. Both matter, but in different ways.
MCh in Plastic Surgery — super-specialty surgical training with focus on reconstructive and cosmetic procedures
MD in Dermatology — specialization in skin and hair disorders, including medical management of hair loss
MS in General Surgery with additional hair transplant fellowship training
ENT Surgery (Otolaryngology) with relevant training — head and neck surgical training relevant to hair restoration anatomy
The guidelines state that surgeons must have dedicated training in hair restoration — not simply a general surgical background. The ISHRS further maintains that practitioners should restrict their surgical practice to hair restoration rather than operating as generalists across multiple unrelated specialties.
When evaluating a surgeon, ask for their primary medical qualification and specialty training. A general practitioner with a short cosmetic medicine course is not equivalent to a surgeon with years of structured postgraduate training in a relevant specialty.
Board Certification in Hair Restoration (ABHRS)
The ABHRS diplomate credential represents the most rigorous independent individual certification available. To become board-certified, a surgeon must:
Submit 150 documented surgical cases for peer review
Pass both a written examination (covering anatomy, physiology, surgical technique, complications, and ethics) and an oral examination reviewing case documentation
Maintain valid medical licensure and complete 100 CME hours per 3-year recertification cycle
If a surgeon claims "board certification" without specifying which board, ask for clarification. Some non-recognized "boards" issue credentials that carry no independent validation.
Fellowship and Training Programme Standards
Structured fellowship training programmes in hair restoration set a well-defined competency pathway:
Duration: Typically 9 to 12 months of structured training
Minimum case volume: Typically a minimum of 70 cases under supervised conditions
Scope: Patient evaluation, surgical planning, FUE and FUT technique, complications management, and practice management
Supervision: All procedures supervised by attending faculty with progressive responsibility as competency develops
A surgeon who has completed a formal fellowship has demonstrable case exposure under supervised conditions. However, surgeons may also qualify through extensive postgraduate training in plastic surgery, dermatology, or otolaryngology with additional hair restoration focus.
Surgical Assistance and Technician Scope of Practice
This is the patient safety issue that receives the least attention in popular content and the most attention in professional guidelines. The scope of practice for hair transplant technicians is strictly defined — and violations are common enough that the ISHRS has issued specific consumer alerts on the topic.
According to ISHRS clinical guidelines, the physician must perform the critical parts of the procedure, including:
Graft extraction (FUE punch incisions)
Recipient site creation
Final graft placement planning
Technicians may assist with graft storage, preparation, and count verification under direct physician supervision. They must never independently perform follicular unit extraction (FUE) punch incisions or recipient site creation.
Guideline-compliant (physician-performed):
The surgeon performs or directly supervises all FUE punch extractions
Recipient site creation is performed by the surgeon or a directly supervised delegate
Graft placement decisions (density, distribution, hairline design) are made by the qualified clinician
Technicians may assist with graft storage, preparation, and count verification under direct physician supervision
Guideline-violating (technician-performed):
Technicians operate autonomously for extraction (FUE punch scoring)
Recipient sites are created by staff without a medical licence
The surgeon is absent or minimally present during critical surgical phases
ISHRS guidelines are explicit: the surgeon must perform or directly supervise all FUE punch extractions. Fully autonomous technician-performed extraction violates professional society guidelines and represents a significant patient safety concern.
Patients should ask directly: "Who will perform the extraction and create the recipient sites during my procedure?" A confident, clear answer from the surgeon — not from a coordinator — is a meaningful positive signal.
Technician scope violations
Technician-performed extractions or recipient site creation is a guideline violation, not a minor technicality. When technicians perform these critical steps, the physician is not providing appropriate supervision and the patient may not have the safety net that physician involvement is designed to provide. This is grounds for concern regardless of what other credentials the clinic holds.
Red Flags in Surgeon Credentials
The following are warning signs when reviewing a surgeon's background:
Vague "board certification" with no named certifying body
No verifiable postgraduate medical qualification — difficulty finding the surgeon in medical council or specialist registry databases
Primary qualification is in an unrelated specialty (e.g., general practice, dentistry) with no documented hair transplant fellowship or structured training
"Cosmetic surgeon" or "hair transplant surgeon" as the claimed specialty without recognized postgraduate training
Claimed credentials that cannot be independently verified at the issuing body's public registry
No clear answer on who performs the critical surgical steps
None of these alone proves a surgeon is incompetent, but each is a reason to ask for more information and to seek verification before proceeding.
Clinical Protocol Standards — What to Expect in a Qualified Facility
Knowing what a qualified facility should do — before, during, and after surgery — gives you a framework for asking informed questions and recognizing when something is missing.
Preoperative Assessment and Candidacy Evaluation
A responsible facility will not schedule you for surgery without a thorough evaluation. According to StatPearls protocols and ISHRS guidelines, the preoperative assessment should include:
Medical history review: Bleeding disorders, autoimmune conditions, cardiovascular risk factors, and current medications (especially anticoagulants)
Physical examination of the scalp: Donor area assessment (density, laxity, follicular unit characteristics) and recipient area evaluation
Rule-out of contraindications: Active scarring alopecia, active infection, or unstable medical conditions
Laboratory testing as clinically indicated: CBC, coagulation profile, liver function tests, hepatitis B and C serology, HIV screening where clinically indicated, ECG for patients above 40–50 years or with cardiovascular risk factors
Realistic outcome discussion: Achievable graft numbers, realistic density expectations
Informed consent: Written consent that describes the chosen technique, expected graft numbers, possible complications, alternative options, and the surgeon's name and qualification
Diagnostic workup is essential before transplant — clinics that skip dermatological evaluation may transplant into active disease zones, wasting grafts and potentially worsening the condition. If a clinic is willing to schedule you for surgery without a face-to-face or video consultation with the operating surgeon, this is a significant red flag.
Infection rates in accredited, protocol-adherent facilities are documented at below 1%. Higher infection rates in the literature are consistently associated with substandard settings, inadequate sterilization, or unsupervised technician-performed procedures.
Minimum standards for a hair transplant facility include:
Positive pressure ventilation with HEPA filtration recommended
Sterile instruments with documented spore-testing records for sterilization equipment
WHO safe injection practices and CDC-standard infection control protocols
Handwashing and sterile gloving protocols for all clinical staff
Ask the clinic directly: "Can I see your sterilization spore-test records from the past three months?" A well-run facility will have this documentation readily available.
Anaesthesia Protocols
Hair transplant is typically performed under local anaesthesia (with or without sedation). According to StatPearls standards, qualified facilities maintain:
Local anaesthetic agents with appropriate vasoconstrictors for haemostasis
Emergency reversal agents on-site if sedation is used (flumazenil for benzodiazepines, naloxone for opioids)
ACLS-certified team member present when sedation is administered
Supplemental oxygen and basic emergency equipment available in the operating room
According to clinical references, all personnel should hold current BLS (Basic Life Support) certification, and the surgeon or a designated team member should hold ACLS certification when sedation is used.
Surgical Team Structure
A minimum hair transplant surgical team typically includes the operating surgeon (who must perform or directly supervise all critical steps) and an assisting technician or scrub nurse for graft handling. The critical point: the number of staff does not indicate quality. What matters is that the physician performs the critical surgical steps — extraction and recipient site creation — not the size of the team.
Graft Handling and Storage
Proper graft handling is essential for graft survival. Evidence-based protocols include:
Hypothermic storage at 2–8°C to maintain graft viability
Defined maximum out-of-body time for grafts
Appropriate storage solutions such as hypotonic storage solutions or tissue temperature preservation media
Graft counting and verification protocols before placement
Graft survival depends on proper handling throughout the procedure. Ask your clinic about their graft storage protocol, particularly if you are considering a clinic that quotes unusually high graft counts — graft survival depends on proper handling.
Postoperative Care and Follow-Up
A qualified facility will not discharge you without a clear follow-up plan. A standardized post-operative follow-up schedule typically includes:
Immediate postop: Day 1 post-procedure review
Early review: 1 week post-procedure
Intermediate review: 1 month post-procedure
Outcome assessment: 6 months and 12 months post-procedure
Before you leave the clinic, you should have:
Written postoperative care instructions in your language
A clear escalation path: who to contact, how to reach them, and what symptoms warrant immediate attention
A documented plan for managing complications if they arise after you return home
Contact details for the clinical team (not just a coordinator) for the first 72 hours post-discharge
For patients travelling to Istanbul, planning for follow-up after return home is especially important. For general recovery expectations, see Hair Transplant Candidacy: Recovery Care.
Documentation and Traceability
You should receive the following documentation before and after your procedure:
Preoperative consent form that names the operating surgeon and describes the technique, expected outcomes, and possible complications
Preoperative photographs standardized and taken with consistent lighting
Intraoperative record of graft counts, technique used, and any adverse events
Postoperative instructions including wound care, medication regimen, and follow-up schedule
Complication reporting pathway — how to report and seek care for unexpected symptoms
Clinics that cannot provide clear, documented consent forms — or that ask you to sign forms in a language you do not read without translation — are operating outside evidence-based practice standards.
Safety Outcomes — What the Evidence Shows
Understanding real complication rates helps calibrate expectations. The evidence base for hair transplant safety is substantial, though complication rates vary across studies depending on definitions, technique, patient populations, and facility standards.
Major Complication Rates and Ranges
The following ranges are drawn from multiple indexed studies. They represent approximate benchmarks — not guaranteed rates for any individual patient.
From Garg & Garg 2021 (n=2,896, 10-year single-centre retrospective, PMC8719980):
These figures represent a single high-volume centre with experienced operators. Complication rates vary across studies depending on definitions, patient populations, and facility standards. The ranges above should be treated as approximate benchmarks, not predictive rates for any individual case.
Infection rates below 1% are achievable in accredited, protocol-adherent facilities. Higher infection rates in the literature are consistently associated with substandard settings, inadequate sterilisation, or technician-performed procedures.
Why rates vary across studies
Complication rates cited in different studies vary for several reasons: retrospective vs. prospective collection methods, different definitions of what constitutes a complication, different patient populations, and different surgical techniques. Use these figures as approximate benchmarks, not precise predictions for your individual case.
Life-Threatening Complications
In a large retrospective series (Garg & Garg 2021, n=2,896 over 10 years), zero life-threatening complications were recorded at a single centre. Other published series similarly found zero life-threatening complications. This is consistent with the broader literature for hair transplant performed under local anaesthetic in structured settings.
Life-threatening complications — such as severe anaphylaxis, massive haemorrhage, or anaesthetic toxicity — are extremely rare when procedures follow established protocols in appropriate settings. However, "extremely rare" is not the same as "impossible," which is why emergency equipment and qualified staff presence matters.
If you experience unexpected symptoms after hair transplant surgery — such as severe swelling, fever, increasing pain, or any sign of infection — contact your provider immediately or seek in-person medical care.
FUE vs. FUT Safety Profile
Both FUE and FUT are well-established techniques with distinct risk profiles:
FUE carries a lower risk of visible linear scarring but presents specific risks including overharvesting (which can cause a moth-eaten or depleted donor appearance), buried grafts, and transient dysesthesia. Overharvesting and moth-eaten appearance is an increasing concern with unsupervised high-volume FUE.
FUT leaves a linear scar at the donor site, with risk of scar widening (approximately 2.1% to 15.1% depending on closure technique and patient factors). When trichophytic closure is performed correctly, scar width can be minimized and hair can grow through the scar.
The technique chosen should depend on your individual characteristics — donor area density, scalp laxity, the extent of hair loss, and your preference regarding scarring and downtime. For a detailed comparison, see our Hair Transplant Candidacy: FUE vs. FUT.
To learn more about each technique, see our treatment guides for FUE, FUT, Sapphire FUE, and DHI.
Risk Mitigation Through Accreditation
The evidence suggests that accredited, protocol-adherent facilities produce meaningfully different safety profiles than high-volume substandard settings. Key risk mitigation mechanisms include:
Qualified surgeon performing critical steps: The single most important risk mitigation factor
Appropriate sterilisation and infection control: Directly linked to infection rates below 1%
Proper graft handling: Affects graft survival and reduces folliculitis risk
Adequate emergency equipment and trained staff: Addresses the extremely rare but theoretically possible intraoperative emergency
Established complication management protocols: Ensures early recognition and appropriate escalation
Accreditation does not eliminate risk — no clinical procedure is risk-free. But the evidence shows that the gap between accredited and non-accredited care is most pronounced precisely on the preventable complications that cause the most patient harm.
Ethical Standards and Advertising — What Promises to Reject
| Condemned Term | Why It Is Misleading |
|---|---|
| "Scarless surgery" | FUE leaves tiny puncture scars; FUT leaves a linear scar. No technique is truly scarless. |
| "Hair cloning" or "hair multiplication" | Research-stage technologies not available in clinical practice. |
| "Guaranteed results" | No ethical surgeon can guarantee specific outcomes. Individual results depend on unpredictable biological factors. |
| "Unlimited grafts" | Donor area has a finite supply. No ethical provider can transplant an unlimited number of grafts. |
| "Pain-free" or "risk-free" | Pain varies by individual. Every surgical procedure carries some degree of risk. |
| "Zero downtime" | Recovery takes time. Full recovery and graft settling takes months. |
| "Non-invasive" | Hair transplant is a surgical procedure involving incisions and tissue handling. |
When you see these terms
Any clinic using ISHRS-condemned marketing terms is either unaware of or indifferent to professional society ethical standards. Either way, it is a reason to look more carefully at what else may be substandard in their practice.
Before-and-After Photo Standards
The ISHRS guidelines require that before-and-after photographs be standardized (consistent lighting, distance, angle, and background), unedited (not retouched or filtered), taken with patient consent, and representative (not cherry-picked to show only ideal outcomes).
Be wary of clinics with before/after galleries that look like professional photography (potentially retouched), show only perfect results, include no men/women with your hair loss pattern, or lack any clinical standardization.
Pricing and Package Transparency
Ethical clinics provide itemized pricing. Be cautious of "unlimited graft" packages (clinically implausible), flat-rate packages without itemization, quotes that differ significantly from market norms without explanation, and non-refundable deposits required quickly under pressure.
Istanbul Medical Tourism — What Changes and What Does Not
International standards apply regardless of geography. A hair transplant performed in Istanbul should meet the same clinical benchmarks as one performed in London, New York, or Seoul. However, the Istanbul context introduces specific considerations that patients should understand before travelling.
Applicable International Standards Apply in Istanbul
The clinical guidelines from ISHRS, the accreditation frameworks from JCI, and surgical safety standards are not geography-specific. They represent evidence-based best practices that any qualified facility should follow, anywhere in the world.
When evaluating a clinic in Istanbul, you should expect the operating surgeon to perform or directly supervise all critical surgical steps, facility standards consistent with international benchmarks, preoperative assessment and candidacy evaluation before scheduling, documented informed consent with the surgeon's name and qualification, and a clear postoperative follow-up plan including coordination with a provider in your home country if needed.
Turkey's 2023 Regulatory Framework
Turkey enacted significant health tourism legislation in 2023. The Health Minister Permits Law explicitly prohibits unlicensed beauty centres from performing hair transplant procedures and requires that hair transplants be performed by specialist physicians in licensed facilities.
Verify the surgeon's specialty registration with the Turkish Medical Association or equivalent registry
Confirm health tourism authorization through official channels, which provides a verification mechanism for facilities authorized to serve international patients
JCI-Accredited Facilities in Istanbul
Most JCI-accredited facilities in Istanbul are large multi-specialty hospital groups — not dedicated single-specialty hair transplant clinics. This is consistent with the global pattern: JCI accredits hospitals, and hospitals are typically multi-specialty institutions.
A dedicated hair transplant clinic in Istanbul without JCI accreditation is not necessarily substandard. JCI accreditation is voluntary, and many excellent facilities do not hold it. What matters is whether the facility meets the underlying standards — proper licensing, qualified surgeons, appropriate protocols, and emergency escalation pathways.
Istanbul's high clinic density
Istanbul has a very high density of hair transplant clinics. This means patients have many options — but also that distinguishing genuinely qualified centres from high-volume marketing operations requires more diligence. The verification steps in this guide are particularly important in high-competition markets.
Planning for Follow-Up After Return
This is the most commonly overlooked aspect of medical travel for hair transplant. When you return home after surgery in Istanbul, you need:
A clear follow-up schedule agreed before you travel: day 1, 1 week, 1 month, 6 months, and 12 months
Remote follow-up capability: Can the clinic conduct video consultations for follow-up reviews?
A local provider back-up plan: If you develop a complication after returning home, who manages it?
Direct contact details for the clinical team (not just a patient coordinator) for the first 72 hours post-discharge
Written postoperative instructions in your language
Any clinic that cannot articulate a clear plan for managing your follow-up once you return home is not providing standard-of-care coordination.
Accreditation and Protocol Checklist — Can Your Provider Pass
Use this checklist during your evaluation. For each category, the questions represent evidence-based due diligence — what the research shows actually protects patients.
Surgeon Qualification Checklist
[ ] What is your primary medical qualification and specialty training? Verify through medical council or specialist registry.
[ ] Are you board-certified in hair restoration (ABHRS diplomate or equivalent)? If yes, verify through the ABHRS certification page or the relevant certifying body's website.
[ ] How many hair transplant procedures have you performed? Look for surgeons with substantial case volumes.
[ ] Do you have fellowship training or equivalent structured programme exposure? Ask for specifics.
[ ] Will you personally perform all critical parts of the procedure — extraction and recipient site creation? A confident "yes" from the surgeon (not from a coordinator) is a positive signal.
[ ] Can I verify my surgeon in a public medical registry before I commit? Reluctance to provide credentials for verification is a red flag.
Facility and Protocol Checklist
[ ] Is this facility licensed by the relevant national authority? For Turkey, verify through the Turkish Ministry of Health registry.
[ ] Is the facility JCI-accredited or accredited by an equivalent national body? If yes, verify at the accrediting body's website.
[ ] Is the facility located within a hospital with emergency department access? If not, ask about the emergency escalation protocol and transfer agreement with a nearby hospital.
[ ] What emergency equipment is available in the OR? At minimum: crash cart, epinephrine, supplemental oxygen, defibrillator.
[ ] Can I see your sterilization spore-test records from the past 3 months? A well-run facility will have this documentation readily available.
[ ] What preoperative tests do you require? Should include CBC, coagulation, and relevant infectious disease screening.
[ ] Who will discuss realistic expected outcomes with me before I sign consent? Should be the operating surgeon or a credentialed clinician — not a non-clinical coordinator.
[ ] What is your postoperative follow-up schedule? Should include defined review appointments at 1 day, 1 week, 1 month, 6 months, and 12 months.
Red Flags Checklist
These are direct warning signs. If you encounter any of these, pause and request clarification before proceeding.
[ ] Technician-performed extraction or recipient site creation — this is a guideline violation regardless of other credentials
[ ] "Guaranteed results," "unlimited grafts," "zero downtime," or "pain-free" — these terms are explicitly condemned by the ISHRS
[ ] No in-person or video consultation with the operating surgeon before scheduling — a surgeon who delegates all consultation to coordinators is not providing appropriate assessment
[ ] Inability to provide preoperative consent documentation naming the operating surgeon
[ ] No clear postoperative follow-up plan — especially critical for medical tourists returning home
When in doubt, pause
If anything about a provider's credentials, protocols, or marketing makes you uncomfortable, it is always better to seek a second opinion before committing. A reputable clinic will not pressure you into a decision quickly. You have the right to verify everything, ask for documentation, and take time to make an informed choice.
Use this checklist as a conversation guide
You do not need to print this checklist and interrogate your surgeon. Use it as a framework for the conversation. A confident, qualified surgeon will welcome these questions. A surgeon (or coordinator) who becomes defensive, dismissive, or rushed when you ask these questions is revealing something important.
If you have reviewed this checklist and are ready to take the next step, the coordination team can help you verify credentials, arrange consultations with qualified providers, and plan your treatment logistics.
2.Garg & Garg. “Complications of Hair Transplant Procedures—Causes and Management.” Journal of Cutaneous and Aesthetic Surgery. 2021. Accessed 2026-04-26.https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8719980/
4.“ISHRS Position Statements.” International Society of Hair Restoration Surgery (ISHRS). 2024. Accessed 2026-04-26.https://ishrs.org/position-statements/
9.“American Board of Hair Restoration Surgery Certification.” American Board of Hair Restoration Surgery (ABHRS). 2024. Accessed 2026-04-26.https://abhrs.org/certification/
10.“American Academy of Dermatology: Hair Transplant Information.” American Academy of Dermatology. 2024. Accessed 2026-04-26.https://www.aad.org/