
Dermatology
Dermatology is available at 27 hospitals across 10 cities in the Voumed network.
Dermatology diagnoses and treats conditions of the skin, hair, nails and visible mucous membranes, from common complaints such as acne, eczema and psoriasis to the early detection of skin cancer. Because the skin is the body's largest and most visible organ, many problems can be recognised early and treated before they progress, which is one reason a clear skin diagnosis is so reassuring. Patients often travel for dermatological care to combine expert assessment, modern diagnostic tools such as dermoscopy and a single coordinated plan that covers medical, surgical and cosmetic skin concerns together. The field spans lifelong conditions that need steady control and one-off worries such as a changing mole, and a good consultation sorts the urgent from the routine.
On this page
At a glance
- Sub-specialties
- medical dermatology, dermato-oncology, dermato-allergy, interventional and surgical dermatology, cosmetic dermatology, paediatric dermatology
- Common tests and procedures
- full skin examination, dermoscopy, skin biopsy, patch and prick allergy testing, cryotherapy, electrocautery, minor lesion and nail surgery, phototherapy
- Common reasons to travel
- experienced teams, prompt skin cancer screening, access to advanced diagnostics, a single plan for medical and cosmetic concerns
- Typical visit
- most care is outpatient, often resolved over a few visits across several days, with no overnight stay for routine work
- Anaesthesia
- usually none; a small lesion or nail procedure is done under local anaesthesia
- Typical first step
- a full skin examination with dermoscopy, and a biopsy only when a tissue sample is needed
Overview
Dermatology brings together three kinds of work that overlap in everyday practice. Medical dermatology diagnoses and controls diseases of the skin, hair and nails, many of them chronic, using creams, tablets, light therapy and, increasingly, targeted modern medicines. Surgical and interventional dermatology removes or treats lesions in the clinic, from a suspicious mole to a troublesome cyst or an ingrown nail. Cosmetic dermatology refreshes and protects the appearance of healthy skin. The same specialist may, in one visit, reassure a patient about a harmless mole, start treatment for stubborn psoriasis and advise on sun protection, because the skin rarely respects neat boundaries and a single trained eye sees the whole picture.
Conditions and sub-specialties
The range of conditions is wide. Inflammatory disease includes acne, the many forms of eczema such as atopic and seborrhoeic dermatitis, psoriasis, urticaria and rosacea. Pigment and hair disorders include vitiligo, melasma and the various patterns of hair loss. Infections of the skin and nails, including fungal infection and warts, are common reasons to be seen, as are nail problems such as thickening and ingrown nails. Dermato-allergy investigates contact and other allergic skin reactions with patch and prick testing. Dermato-oncology focuses on benign and malignant skin tumours, and a dedicated area manages sexually transmitted infections that show on the skin. Many of these conditions appear in childhood, so paediatric skin care is part of the field.
Common treatments and procedures
Treatment is matched to the diagnosis. Topical creams and gels, tablets and, for selected inflammatory disease, modern targeted and biologic medicines bring most conditions under control, while phototherapy helps in psoriasis, eczema and some pigment disorders. In the clinic, cryotherapy freezes warts and small lesions, electrocautery and curettage remove others, and a simple excision under local anaesthesia takes away a mole or skin cancer for laboratory examination. Nail surgery treats severe ingrown or diseased nails. Cosmetic dermatology adds skin care, chemical peels, mesotherapy, platelet-rich plasma, laser rejuvenation and injectable treatments for lines and volume. Most of these are quick outpatient procedures with little or no downtime, and many patients combine a medical assessment with a cosmetic one in the same trip.
Diagnostics and technology
A careful history and a full skin examination remain the foundation, and much can be diagnosed by trained inspection alone. Dermoscopy, a handheld magnified light that reveals structures invisible to the naked eye, sharpens the assessment of moles and is central to spotting melanoma early. When a diagnosis is uncertain, a small skin biopsy taken under local anaesthesia gives the laboratory a tissue sample, and digital photography can track a lesion or a whole-body mole map over time. Allergy testing identifies triggers in contact eczema and related conditions, and bloods, swabs and fungal tests support the picture when infection or a systemic cause is suspected. These tools let the team separate harmless changes from those that need treatment with confidence.
What to expect as an international patient
For people travelling from abroad, dermatology is one of the more straightforward journeys, because most care is outpatient and the timeline is short. A typical visit often begins with a remote review of photographs and history, followed by a full examination and dermoscopy on arrival, with any biopsy or minor procedure done the same day or shortly after. Biopsy results usually take a few days, so many patients plan a stay long enough to receive their result and a clear plan before flying home, often a handful of days rather than weeks. There is no general anaesthetic for routine work and no overnight stay, so travel after a visit is usually unrestricted. Interpreter and international patient support help with appointments, consent and instructions, and ongoing conditions can be reviewed remotely once you are home.
Frequently asked questions
These answers are general guidance and may vary by provider. Confirm the details with the hospital you choose.
What does a dermatologist treat?
A dermatologist treats diseases of the skin, hair, nails and visible mucous membranes, including acne, eczema, psoriasis, vitiligo, fungal infections, hair loss, urticaria, warts and moles, nail conditions and skin cancer, as well as cosmetic skin concerns. The same specialist handles both the medical and the cosmetic side of skin health.
How long do I need to stay for skin cancer screening or a mole check?
A mole check and screening are usually completed in a single outpatient visit with examination and dermoscopy. If a lesion needs a biopsy, results take a few days, so a stay of several days lets you receive the result and a plan before you leave. Nothing about the visit requires an overnight hospital stay.
Is a skin biopsy painful, and will it leave a scar?
A biopsy is done under local anaesthesia, so the area is numb and the procedure is brief and well tolerated. A small biopsy leaves only a tiny mark, and your team will explain wound care and what to expect as it heals, including how to keep any scar as discreet as possible.
Can I fly home soon after a biopsy or minor skin surgery?
Yes. Routine skin procedures are minor and do not involve general anaesthesia, so flying is generally safe within a day or two, once any bleeding has settled. Your dermatologist will give simple aftercare instructions for the wound and tell you when stitches, if any, should be removed.
Will there be interpreter or language support?
Yes. International patient services commonly include interpreters and coordinators who help with appointments, consent, instructions and everyday questions, so language is not a barrier to a clear diagnosis and safe care throughout your visit.
Can chronic conditions such as psoriasis and eczema really be controlled?
Yes. Psoriasis and eczema are long-term conditions rather than one-time problems, but they are controlled well with topical and oral medicines, phototherapy and, where appropriate, modern targeted treatments. The aim is to reduce flares and keep the skin comfortable, with a plan you can continue at home.
Is it safe to combine a medical skin assessment with cosmetic treatment on the same trip?
Often, yes. Many patients use one trip for both a full skin check and cosmetic care such as peels, laser or injectables. Your dermatologist will sequence treatments safely, making sure any medical issue is addressed first and that cosmetic procedures suit your skin and your travel plans.
How does follow up work once I am home?
Most skin conditions can be reviewed remotely with photographs and video, and your dermatologist will provide a written plan and prescriptions to continue locally. For a biopsy result or an ongoing condition, the team stays reachable, and routine wound care or stitch removal can usually be done by a clinician near your home.
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