Top skin-lesions Providers in Stamford

Best Skin Lesions Clinics in Stamford

Renu Skin And Aesthetics

Profile
Renu Skin And Aesthetics

Skin care clinic

Rating
(10 reviews)
Location
Stamford PE9 2DB, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Skin-lesions Treatment in Stamford

Our dataset currently has 9 clinic(s), with approximately 398 reviews and an average rating of 4.555555556.

Medical Infrastructure:

    • NHS GP practices within town
    • Stamford & Rutland Hospital (community hospital services)
    • Secondary care via Peterborough City Hospital
    • Presence of doctor-led aesthetic and GP-linked practices

Local Aethetics Market:

    • Mature for market-town scale
    • Wide treatment breadth including regenerative and oncology-linked dermatology

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 Stamford

      • 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:

        • Rail links to Peterborough (connecting to London Kings Cross ~1 hour total travel)
        • Road access via A1 corridor

      Parking availability:

        Town-centre car parks and on-street parking generally available

      Clinic distribution:

        Clinics concentrated in historic town centre retail and professional premises

      Airport proximity:

        • Approximately 1–1.5 hours from East Midlands Airport
        • Similar distance to London Luton

      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) for regulated medical activities

          Private insurance usage locally:

            • Dermatology and skin cancer assessment may be covered under private medical insurance
            • Cosmetic injectables self-funded

          Cosmetic finance availability:

            • Selective availability for higher-ticket treatments (e.g., RF microneedling, HIFU packages)
            • Many treatments paid upfront

          Who Is a Good Candidate?

            Choosing a Clinic

              Current average rating citywide: 4.555555556

              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))