Top alopecia Providers in Oxford

Best Alopecia Clinics in Oxford

Ahmeys Health And Skin Clinic

Profile
Ahmeys Health And Skin
CQC

Walk-in clinic

Rating
(48 reviews)
Location
Oxford OX4 2LA, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Alopecia Treatment in Oxford

Our dataset currently has 6 clinic(s), with approximately 276 reviews and an average rating of 4.666666667.

Medical Infrastructure:

    • Major tertiary and quaternary care hub via Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust (John Radcliffe, Churchill Hospital)
    • Regional skin cancer MDT network participation
    • NIHR research-active environment

Local Aethetics Market:

    Clinically mature and research-integrated dermatology ecosystem

Goals of Alopecia Treatment

  • Slow or stop hair loss progression
  • Stimulate regrowth where possible
  • Manage symptoms and appearance (like wigs, camouflage)
  • Support mental wellbeing because hair loss can hit people hard emotionally

Alopecia Treatment Options

Medical & Non-Surgical Approaches

    Pros of Alopecia Treatment

      Cons of Alopecia Treatment

        Cost of Alopecia Treatment in Oxford

          Accessibility

          Public transport:

            • Strong rail connectivity to London Paddington and Birmingham
            • Local bus network
            • Proximity to M40 motorway

          Parking availability:

            • Limited city-centre parking
            • Hospital campus parking regulated
            • Park-and-ride infrastructure widely used

          Clinic distribution:

            Clinics distributed between city centre consulting rooms and hospital-adjacent sites (e.g., Churchill Hospital area)

          Airport proximity:

            • Approximately 45–50 miles to Heathrow Airport
            • Rail links to London airports

          Preparing for Your Alopecia Appointment

            Treatment Safety & Local Regulations

              Yes, UK bodies like NICE have started recommending treatments (e.g. ritlecitinib for severe alopecia areata on the NHS) and MHRA regulates medicines.

              Local regulatory authority:

                • Care Quality Commission (CQC)
                • General Medical Council (GMC)

              Private insurance usage locally:

                High uptake for consultant dermatology and surgical services (Bupa, AXA, Aviva typical in this demographic)

              Cosmetic finance availability:

                • Self-pay predominant for aesthetics
                • Structured finance available for surgical interventions in private sector

              Who Is a Good Candidate?

                Choosing a Clinic

                  Current average rating citywide: 4.666666667

                  Recovery & Long-Term Results

                  • No downtime for most topical or oral therapies. Procedures might cause transient redness or irritation.
                  • Mild dryness, irritation with topicals, systemic drug effects like headaches or GI upset, and rare serious risks with some immune modulators.
                  Aftercare: