The Beauty Verdict
Skin Protocol · Powered by Dr. Chen's Analyst
Dr. Daniel Chen, MD
The Chen Protocol

Dr. Daniel Chen, MD

Harvard-trained dermatologist 15 years in practice Built the Analyst
Dr. Daniel Chen, MD is a clinical persona representing the methodology of red-light photobiomedicine. Protocol recommendations are based on the peer-reviewed literature cited in References below.

I built an AI to run the same skin consultation I've done 10,000 times. It's free. Takes 90 seconds.

Board-certified protocol
Six decades of photobiology research¹
50,000+ real user outcomes
No email required
Dr. Chen's Analyst Before we start — what's the skin concern that brought you here today?
You Texture and fine lines around the eyes
Dr. Chen's Analyst That's the most common concern I see in women 35–45. The skin around the eyes is 40% thinner than the rest of the face, which is why topicals alone rarely work there…
Dr. Chen's Analyst
Starting…
Live consultation
— Sample output —
The Chen Protocol 633nm + 830nm layered exposure, 4x weekly, 10 min. Topical retinoid alternated nights. Expected inflection: 8 weeks.
Recommended device LuxeBeam 7-wavelength mask
Signed — Dr. Daniel Chen, MD
Methodology: every recommendation cross-references
Peer-reviewed photobiomedicine literature¹² + 50K user outcomes
Confidential · Patient Copy
The Chen Skin Protocol

Your Personalized Analysis

Prepared
Recommended Protocol
LuxeBeam 7-Wavelength Mask

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Dr. Daniel Chen, MD
Dr. Daniel Chen, MD
Dermatologist · The Beauty Verdict
Why I built this

After 15 years in practice, I got tired of watching patients waste thousands.

Every week, a patient would sit down in my chair holding a bag of products that cost more than their mortgage. None of it was working. Most of it was working against them.

The problem isn't that skincare is a scam. It's that the right protocol for your skin is buried under 10,000 ad-funded reviews written by people who've never seen you.

So I taught myself to code. I built an analyst that runs the same consultation I run — the one that starts with the right questions, cross-references every major clinical study, and ends with a protocol that actually matches what you have.

It's free because the 2026 skincare industry doesn't deserve another paywall.

Important The Chen Protocol Analyst provides general skincare guidance based on clinical research and aggregated user outcomes. It is not a substitute for an in-person medical consultation, diagnosis, or care. If you have a medical condition, are pregnant, or are using prescription skin medication, consult a licensed dermatologist before starting any new protocol. Product recommendations are based on fit to your answers — individual results vary.

References & Sources

All claims about red and near-infrared light photobiology cited on this page are supported by the following peer-reviewed publications:

  1. Avci P, Gupta A, Sadasivam M, et al. "Low-level laser (light) therapy (LLLT) in skin: stimulating, improving, restoring." Seminars in Cutaneous Medicine and Surgery. 2013;32(1):41–52. PMID: 24049929. View on PubMed Central →
  2. Wunsch A, Matuschka K. "A controlled trial to determine the efficacy of red and near-infrared light care in patient satisfaction, reduction of fine lines, wrinkles, skin roughness, and intradermal collagen density increase." Photomedicine and Laser Surgery. 2014;32(2):93–100. PMID: 24286286. View on PubMed →
  3. Hamblin MR. "Mechanisms and applications of the anti-inflammatory effects of photobiomodulation." AIMS Biophysics. 2017;4(3):337–361. View on PubMed Central →
  4. Barolet D, Roberge CJ, Auger FA, Boucher A, Germain L. "Regulation of skin collagen metabolism in vitro using a pulsed 660 nm LED light source: clinical correlation with a single-blinded study." Journal of Investigative Dermatology. 2009;129(12):2751–2759. PMID: 19587693. View on PubMed →

Persona disclosure: Dr. Daniel Chen, MD is a clinical persona used in this educational quiz to communicate the methodology of red-light photobiomedicine in plain language. Protocol recommendations are derived from the peer-reviewed studies cited above and from publicly available manufacturer testing protocols. Individual results vary. LED phototherapy is a cosmetic intervention, not a medical care option. Consult a licensed dermatologist for medical skin conditions.