Top skin-lesions Providers in Eastbourne

Best Skin Lesions Clinics in Eastbourne

Dr Anita Amin

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Dr Anita Amin
CQC

Dermatologist

Rating
(20 reviews)
Location
Eastbourne BN21 3BG, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Established Homeopathic Skin Specialist

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Established Homeopathic Skin Specialist

Dermatologist

Rating
( reviews)
Location
Eastbourne BN21 3LP, United Kingdom

Irresistible Skin Clinic

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Irresistible Skin Clinic

Skin care clinic

Rating
(72 reviews)
Location
Eastbourne BN21 4LL, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Skin-lesions Treatment in Eastbourne

Our dataset currently has 11 clinic(s), with approximately 172 reviews and an average rating of 4.890909091.

Medical Infrastructure:

    • Eastbourne District General Hospital
    • NHS GP training practices
    • Access to private hospital networks in Sussex (Spire, Nuffield, Montefiore in Brighton)
    • CQC-regulated providers

Local Aethetics Market:

    Mature and consultant-driven aesthetic and dermatology market

Goals of Skin-lesions Treatment

  • Correctly identify what the lesion actually is
  • Rule out malignancy early if theres any doubt
  • Treat or remove lesions that are symptomatic, growing, bleeding, or cosmetically distressing
  • Preserve healthy tissue and minimise scarring
  • Give you clarity so youre not guessing or spiralling on Google at 1am

Skin-lesions Treatment Options

Medical & Non-Surgical Approaches

  • Some lesions can be monitored rather than removed, especially if clearly benign. Others respond to topical treatments like cryotherapy or prescription creams. DIY or cosmetic-only approaches are risky for undiagnosed lesions because they can destroy visual clues needed for cancer detection. In short, assessment first, treatment second. ([cancerresearchuk.org](https://www.cancerresearchuk.org/about-cancer/skin-cancer))

Pros of Skin-lesions Treatment

    Cons of Skin-lesions Treatment

      Cost of Skin-lesions Treatment in Eastbourne

      • NHS assessment and treatment is free when medically indicated
      • Private consultation for skin lesions often ranges GBP 200 to 350
      • Private removal with histology typically GBP 500 to 1,000+ depending on complexity and site ([harleystreetskinclinic.com](https://www.harleystreetskinclinic.com/articles/understanding-mole-removal-cost-uk-guide/))
      • Benign vs suspicious lesions
      • Whether biopsy and histology are included
      • Size, number, and anatomical location
      • Clinic location and surgeon experience
      • Need for reconstruction or stitches

      Accessibility

      Public transport:

        • Direct rail links to London Victoria and Brighton
        • Strong local bus network

      Parking availability:

        • Generally accessible parking in suburban clinic areas
        • Regulated parking in town centre

      Clinic distribution:

        Clinics distributed across town centre and residential-commercial areas

      Airport proximity:

        Approximately 1–1.5 hours to Gatwick Airport

      Preparing for Your Skin-lesions Appointment

        Treatment Safety & Local Regulations

          Yes. NICE guidelines cover suspected cancer referrals and management of skin lesions, especially melanoma and non-melanoma skin cancers. MHRA regulates devices and treatments used. There isnt one single skin lesion guideline because its a category, not a diagnosis. ([nice.org.uk](https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/ng12))

          Local regulatory authority:

            Care Quality Commission (CQC)

          Private insurance usage locally:

            • Medical dermatology often covered under private insurance
            • Cosmetic treatments predominantly self-funded

          Cosmetic finance availability:

            • Likely available for higher-ticket procedures (liposuction, HIFU, laser packages)
            • Retiree demographic may favour pay-per-treatment model

          Who Is a Good Candidate?

            Choosing a Clinic

              Current average rating citywide: 4.890909091

              Recovery & Long-Term Results

                Aftercare:
                • Some lesions can be monitored rather than removed, especially if clearly benign. Others respond to topical treatments like cryotherapy or prescription creams. DIY or cosmetic-only approaches are risky for undiagnosed lesions because they can destroy visual clues needed for cancer detection. In short, assessment first, treatment second. ([cancerresearchuk.org](https://www.cancerresearchuk.org/about-cancer/skin-cancer))