Top psoriasis Providers in London

Best Psoriasis Clinics in London

Bupa Cromwell Hospital Dermatology

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Bupa Cromwell Hospital Dermatology
CQC

Skin care clinic

Rating
( reviews)
Location
London SW5 0TU, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Cedars Dermatology

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Cedars Dermatology
CQC

Skin care clinic

Rating
(7 reviews)
Location
London W1G 7AF, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Central Middlesex Hospital Dermatology

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Central Middlesex Hospital Dermatology
CQC

Skin care clinic

Rating
(1 reviews)
Location
London NW10 7NS, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Derm Design Chelsea

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Derm Design Chelsea
CQC

Skin care clinic

Rating
(22 reviews)
Location
London SW11 8NN, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Dermconsult Dermatology Clinic

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Dermconsult Dermatology Clinic
CQC

Dermatologist

Rating
(8 reviews)
Location
London W1G 8QR, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Dr Adam Friedmann

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Dr Adam Friedmann
CQC

Doctor

Rating
(5 reviews)
Location
London W1G 7LH, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Dr Anastasia Therianou Consultant Dermatologist

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Dr Anastasia Therianou Consultant

Dermatologist

Rating
(1 reviews)
Location
London W1G 7JY, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Dr Ari Rafiq

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Dr Ari Rafiq

Dermatologist

Rating
( reviews)
Location
London W11 4UE, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Dr Bouvresse Dermatologist

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Dr Bouvresse Dermatologist
CQC

Dermatologist

Rating
(3 reviews)
Location
London SW7 2JN, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Dr George Kravvas

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Dr George Kravvas

Dermatologist

Rating
(24 reviews)
Location
London W1G 8QR, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Dr Mohammad Ghazavi

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Dr Mohammad Ghazavi
CQC

Dermatologist

Rating
( reviews)
Location
London W9 1BZ, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Dr Nicola Clayton

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Dr Nicola Clayton

Dermatologist

Rating
(2 reviews)
Location
London SW6 5RX, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Psoriasis Treatment in London

Our dataset currently has 276 clinic(s), with approximately 213372 reviews and an average rating of 4.52.

Medical Infrastructure:

    • Multiple tertiary NHS teaching hospitals (e.g., Chelsea & Westminster Hospital, Guy’s and St Thomas’, UCLH)
    • Extensive private hospital network (HCA Healthcare UK, The London Clinic)
    • Internationally recognised dermatology and plastic surgery consultants.

Local Aethetics Market:

    • Highly mature and saturated
    • Internationally competitive.

Goals of Psoriasis Treatment

  • Reduce inflammation and scaling so the skin feels less itchy or painful.
  • Slow down the rapid skin cell turnover back towards normal levels.
  • Improve quality of life by controlling flares and preventing complications (e.g. psoriatic arthritis).
  • Manage comorbidities like cardiovascular or psychological impacts that often accompany psoriasis. ([turn0search0][turn0search3])

Psoriasis Treatment Options

Medical & Non-Surgical Approaches

    Pros of Psoriasis Treatment

      Cons of Psoriasis Treatment

        Cost of Psoriasis Treatment in London

        • On the NHS, psoriasis treatment is generally provided free at the point of care, including consultations and many prescribed therapies (creams, phototherapy, systemic drugs).
        • Private dermatology clinics may charge consultation fees, phototherapy courses or biologic management plans at variable prices.
        • Which treatments are used (topical vs phototherapy vs systemic vs biologics).
        • Severity and how often you need follow-up.
        • Private clinics often structure pricing differently (consultation, tests, follow-ups).
        • Monitoring needs (blood tests, phototherapy supplies) can add cost in private pathways.

        Accessibility

        Public transport:

          • Extensive Underground, rail, and bus connectivity
          • Clinics clustered near major stations (Oxford Circus, Bond Street, South Kensington).

        Parking availability:

          • Limited central parking
          • Strong reliance on public transport and private chauffeur services.

        Clinic distribution:

          Heavy concentration in Central London (Harley Street, Chelsea, Kensington) with secondary clusters in affluent suburbs (Richmond, Hampstead, Canary Wharf).

        Airport proximity:

          Multiple international airports (Heathrow, Gatwick, London City, Stansted, Luton).

        Preparing for Your Psoriasis Appointment

          Treatment Safety & Local Regulations

          Topical treatments are usually safe but can thin skin if overused or misused. Monitor potency and duration with clinician input. ([turn0search5][turn0search8])Systemic and biologic drugs require monitoring blood tests and screening for infections because they suppress parts of the immune system. ([turn0search2])Phototherapy requires eye protection and careful dosing to avoid burns.

          Some procedures like phototherapy arent painful but may warm or tingle. Treatment for flares may involve discomfort from plaques themselves rather than the therapy.

            NICE has detailed guidance on assessing and managing psoriasis in adults, young people and children, covering initial topical therapies, phototherapy and when to escalate to systemic or biologic treatments. ([turn0search0][turn0search5])

            Local regulatory authority:

              • Care Quality Commission (CQC) for England
              • General Medical Council (GMC) for doctors
              • Nursing and Midwifery Council (NMC) for nurse prescribers.

            Private insurance usage locally:

              • High for medically indicated dermatology and skin cancer treatment (BUPA, AXA, Aviva recognition common)
              • Cosmetic procedures largely self-funded.

            Cosmetic finance availability:

              • Widely available via FCA-regulated finance providers
              • 0% promotional finance common in competitive segments.

            Who Is a Good Candidate?

              Choosing a Clinic

                Current average rating citywide: 4.52

                Recovery & Long-Term Results

                • Topical treatments often have little downtime.
                • Phototherapy may cause temporary redness.
                • Systemic/biologic therapies may require monitoring for side effects.
                • Skin irritation, thinning with potent steroids, photosensitivity or systemic drug adverse effects like liver or immune effects.
                Aftercare: