Medical dermatology
Acne, eczema, psoriasis, urticaria — chronic conditions managed with evidence, patience and a plan you can actually follow.
The Skin Journal · Vol. XV — A Dermatology Practice
It records every season you have lived through. Dr. Sofia Anand reads the terrain — and helps it heal, settle and glow.
Dermatology is the only specialty whose organ is on permanent display. It faces the weather, the years and the mirror — and it keeps a diary of all three. This clinic exists for both halves of that truth: the medical (moles that change, rashes that persist, scalps that surrender) and the personal (the wish to look like yourself, on a good day, for longer).
Every consultation begins with the full story of your skin — genetics, climate, habits, history — because a prescription without context is just an expensive guess. Treatment plans favour the smallest effective intervention, sequenced over seasons rather than stacked into one visit.
Acne, eczema, psoriasis, urticaria — chronic conditions managed with evidence, patience and a plan you can actually follow.
Dermoscopy and full-body mapping. The moles you can't watch, photographed and compared — millimetre by millimetre, year by year.
Pigment, redness, scars and texture — treated with light tuned to the exact chromophore, not a one-wavelength-fits-all promise.
Subtle, anatomical, reversible-first. The goal is your face after a holiday — never somebody else's face.
Pattern loss, alopecia areata and scarring alopecias — diagnosed with trichoscopy, treated before the follicles file for retirement.
“Good skin is not flawless. It is skin that looks like it has been lived in kindly.”
— Dr. Sofia Anand
No laser, needle or peel is booked until the skin has a name for what ails it. Machines don't diagnose; dermatologists do.
The cheapest anti-ageing molecule ever invented is dispensed daily, wholesale, without apology.
The best aesthetic outcome is the one nobody can point to. Friends should say “you look rested,” not “what did you do?”