After a decade in clinical practice, HCPC podiatrist Adam Creasey has seen the same damage caused by the wrong tool hundreds of times. Here's what he tells every patient — and what he actually recommends.
Let me tell you what I see every single week in my clinic. A patient comes in with painful, thickened, or ingrown toenails — not because they've neglected their feet, but because they've been using the wrong tool. They've been doing their best. The tool has been making it worse.
This is not a minor inconvenience. For people with diabetes, peripheral neuropathy, or reduced circulation, a jagged nail edge left by a failing clipper can become an open wound that goes unnoticed until it's infected. For elderly patients with limited mobility, the inability to manage their own nails leads to avoidable clinic appointments, sometimes at significant personal cost and effort.
The mechanism of damage is straightforward. Standard pharmacy clippers are manufactured for thin, healthy nails — typically the nails of a 25-year-old. They have a narrow jaw, a relatively weak blade steel, and a spring calibrated for normal cutting resistance. When applied to a nail that has thickened — which begins to happen in most people in their fifties due to changes in circulation, nail bed health, and growth rate — the blade cannot cut cleanly. Instead, it compresses the nail until the nail shatters or splits. The result is a rough, jagged edge that catches on socks, digs into the surrounding skin, and in many cases creates or worsens an ingrown nail.
"A standard clipper on a thick nail is not just ineffective. It is actively causing damage. I see the results every week."
I want to be clear about something before I go further. I have no interest in alarm for its own sake. Most of the people I see have been managing their feet perfectly well — they simply have the wrong tool for the job. And the solution is entirely straightforward once you understand the problem.
Two years ago I began using Blizzard instruments in my clinical practice at The Podiatry Clinic in Teignmouth. The reason was simple: the engineering specifications matched what I needed. The wide-opening jaw accommodates genuinely thickened nails. The blades are forged from German medical-grade stainless steel and hand-sharpened to clinical specification. The double-leaf spring mechanism means smooth, controlled cutting with minimal force — critical for patients who have reduced grip strength or need me to work slowly and precisely around sensitive tissue.
The Blizzard clipper is CE Certified — meaning it has been independently verified to meet EU and UK clinical instrument standards. This is an external audit, not a manufacturer claim. The instruments are also fully autoclavable, which means they can be sterilised to the same standard used between patients in clinical settings. I use them on patients every day.
I also recommend them for home use. Not to every patient — but specifically to the growing number of patients who ask me, after their appointment, what clipper they should use between visits. My answer used to be vague. Now I have a specific, confident answer.
In my experience, the following patient groups see the most dramatic improvement when they switch to a proper clinical-grade clipper:
When I began recommending Blizzard clippers to patients, I asked for their feedback. The responses were remarkably consistent. The same three things came up repeatedly: it was effortless, it cut cleanly in one movement, and — most commonly — they wished they'd had one years ago.
I put my HCPC registration behind tools I recommend to patients. That is not something I take lightly. Blizzard instruments meet the standard I require for clinical use and for confident patient recommendation. The CE certification, the German steel specification, the double-action mechanism, and the jaw geometry all reflect engineering decisions made for clinical outcomes, not cosmetic appeal.
If your nails have become harder to manage, the answer is not to go to a podiatrist every six weeks for the rest of your life. The answer is to have the right tool at home. The Blizzard Heavy Duty Clipper has a 30-day money-back guarantee — if it isn't right for you, you lose nothing. In my clinical opinion: for this specific problem, it is the right choice.
CE Certified Medical Grade · German Forged · Used in NHS Podiatry Clinics · Free UK Delivery
"You shouldn't need a clinic appointment to have access to the right tools. That's why I recommend Blizzard to every patient who asks."
— Adam C. Creasey · HCPC Registered Podiatrist · CH21466 · The Podiatry Clinic, Teignmouth
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