Let $Z_1,Z_2,\ldots,Z_n$ be i.i.d. copies of a random variable $Z$ distributed as $\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}X+i\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}Y$ with $X$ and $Y$ independent standard Normal random variables i.e.~$X\sim\mathcal{N}(0,1)$ and $Y\sim\mathcal{N}(0,1)$. Simply stated $Z$ is a complex Gaussian random variable with $\mathbb{E}[|Z|^2]=1$. I am interested in concentration of the form
\begin{align}
\mathbb{P}\Big\{\Bigg|\frac{\sum_{k=1}^n|Z_k|^{2p}}{n}-p!\Bigg|>t\Big\}<f(t,p,n).
\end{align}
(Please note that $E[|Z|^{2p}]=p!$).
I would like a result as sharp as possible but "simple" that holds for small values of t. I would like the result to hold for arbitrary small values of t e.g. for all $0< t<t_0$ for $t_0$ a fixed numerical constant. For example, I was wondering can one prove the above for f of the form below
\begin{align}
f(t,n,p)=ce^{-\gamma\sqrt[p]{nt}}
\end{align}
where $c$ and $\gamma$ are fixed numerical constants. I should add that I don't need the result for all value of p and would be happy with a result that holds for small values of p such as $p=2,3,4$.