Source-Backed Profile
Turn credentials, training, clinic evidence, and patient testimony into a public record patients can inspect before choosing care.
Submit the form below and a verification coordinator will confirm the practice details, records available for review, and next evidence step.
Provide a few details about your practice. There is no obligation — an onboarding specialist will reach out to walk you through what verification involves.
Turn credentials, training, clinic evidence, and patient testimony into a public record patients can inspect before choosing care.
Give patients evidence that explains why verified experience, planning, and ethics matter more than the lowest advertised price.
Appear in a directory where inclusion depends on source-confirmed records, not paid placement or self-written claims.
Publish a profile that helps patients understand who you are, what was verified, and what still requires a personal consultation.
Complaint review gives both patient and surgeon a documented process for clarifying concerns before disputes become public claims.
Verification gives your public record a documented reference point when unsupported claims, impersonation, or misleading listings appear online.
You submit the form, and a verification coordinator contacts you to confirm the details of your practice.
We research your record and confirm your degree, license, and certifications directly at their source.
When field review is required, reviewers document clinic context, interview staff and patients, and collect affidavits.
Every finding is fact-checked and published as your public Verified Surgeon™ profile.
Enrollment starts a serious verification file. The process should protect patients and credible surgeons by making cooperation, documentation, and source review visible from the first step.
The strongest applications identify the surgeon, clinic role, credential sources, treatment scope, patient evidence, and public claims that need review.
Payment opens the work, but evidence, access, source confirmation, and continued transparency determine what can be published.
The final profile must distinguish verified findings, pending checks, unresolved limits, and claims that should not be treated as established.
If you would rather begin by email, send your name, clinic, specialty, and the records you want reviewed. A verification coordinator will answer questions and outline the first evidence step.