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All cosmetic surgery involves risks and individual results vary. Decisions about whether to proceed should be made after careful consideration and following at least two consultations with a qualified medical practitioner.
Specialist Registration
FRACS (ORL-HNS)
Fellow, Royal Australasian College of Surgeons — Otorhinolaryngology, Head & Neck Surgery
International Board Certification
IBCFPRS
International Board Certification in Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery
Fellowship Training
Chicago & Amsterdam
Rush University Medical Center (ARS Fellowship) and Academic Medical Center, Amsterdam (EAFPS)
Areas of Practice
Dr Roth’s practice covers the nose, face, neck, and ears. He does not perform procedures outside this scope.
Rhinoplasty
Primary, revision, functional, and preservation rhinoplasty. Over 150 procedures per year. Fellowship-trained in Chicago and Amsterdam.
Deep Plane Facelift
Deep plane facelift as the primary technique — releasing the retaining ligaments rather than relying on skin tension. Over 50 procedures per year.
Neck Lift & Deep Neck Lift
Addressing subplatysmal fat, digastric muscles, and submandibular glands — not just skin tightening.
Blepharoplasty
Upper and lower eyelid surgery — with careful brow position assessment before any skin excision is planned.
Brow Lift & Lip Lift
Endoscopic and trichophytic brow lift; subnasal lip lift. Technique selected based on individual anatomy and hairline position.
Nose & Sinus Surgery
Septoplasty, turbinate reduction, FESS, and nasal valve repair — functional airway surgery with or without cosmetic rhinoplasty.
Why a Focused Practice Matters
The honest answer to why patients choose this practice is volume and scope. Doing a large number of a narrow range of procedures is how surgical judgement develops — there is no substitute for it. A high-volume practice in a specific procedure means encountering a wide range of anatomical variation, managing a wide range of outcomes, and developing the kind of judgement that only comes from repetition. That changes how you assess a new patient, how you plan, and what you tell people honestly about what to expect.
Every consultation involves a thorough examination, honest discussion of what is and is not achievable for your specific anatomy, and no obligation to proceed. Patients are encouraged to take as much time as they need before making any decision — questions are welcomed at every stage of the process.
— Dr Jason Roth, MBBS, FRACS (ORL-HNS), IBCFPRS | Why Choose Dr Roth →





