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Locations · East of Kailash

Skin Clinic in East of Kailash, Delhi

Delhi Derma Clinic operates from Basement, D-48, D Block, East of Kailash, New Delhi 110065. The address is the registered consultation site for the dermatology pathway run by Dr Chetna Ghura, MBBS MD Dermatology, DMC 2851. The clinic operates Monday to Saturday, 10:00 AM to 7:00 PM, by prior appointment. The framework treats the consultation as a calibrated clinical conversation rather than a sales appointment, and the pages below cover orientation, common concerns, the pathway range, the visit structure, and answers to frequently asked questions.

Quick orientation

The East of Kailash clinic is the dermatology consultation address for Delhi Derma Clinic. The framework operates on a prior-appointment basis, with the dermatologist as the clinical decision-maker for assessment and recommendation across the pathway range. Patients are seen across the standard MD-Dermatology scope — skin, hair, and selected procedural pathways for cosmetic-dermatology concerns. Procedural pathways follow the consultation only when the assessment supports them. The framework does not promise same-day decisions, fixed-outcome packages, or invented branch coverage.

Address
Basement, D-48, D Block, East of Kailash, New Delhi 110065
Hours
Mon–Sat · 10:00 AM – 7:00 PM (by prior appointment)
Phone
+91-92119-48111
Lead dermatologist
Dr Chetna Ghura, MBBS MD Dermatology, DMC 2851
Consultation fee
₹1,999*

Walk-ins are not the standard model — please confirm your booking before visiting. Sunday closure and selected national-holiday closures apply.

Address, timings, and booking

Where is the clinic located in East of Kailash?

Delhi Derma Clinic operates from Basement, D-48, D Block, East of Kailash, New Delhi 110065. The address sits within the residential D Block of East of Kailash and is the registered consultation address for the dermatology pathway. Patients are seen by prior appointment; please confirm your booking before visiting. The framework treats appointment confirmation as part of patient-flow planning rather than as inconvenient.

What are the consultation timings?

The clinic operates Monday to Saturday, 10:00 AM to 7:00 PM, by prior appointment. Specific consultation slots within those hours are calibrated to the case — first-visit dermatology consultations typically run thirty-to-forty-five minutes, with longer slots scheduled for complex multi-concern cases. Sunday closure and selected national-holiday closures apply; the booking conversation confirms slot availability for the patient's preferred window.

How do I book an appointment?

Patient-side booking is supported through the clinic phone line and the website booking pathway. The booking conversation confirms the slot, the consultation fee structure, the documents the patient is asked to bring, and the visit format. The framework does not push same-day-procedure booking pressure during the appointment-setting conversation; the consultation visit itself is the route to the calibrated written plan and the procedural pathway only follows once the assessment supports it.

What should I bring to the East of Kailash visit?

Useful items include any prior medical reports relevant to the presenting concern, the current list of medications and supplements with doses where possible, photographs of any prior pattern relevant to trajectory tracking, prior treatment records if relevant, and the patient's questions written down so they are not forgotten in the visit. The First Visit FAQs page covers the preparation framework in detail.

Is the East of Kailash clinic the dermatology consultation address?

Yes. The address is the registered consultation address for Dr Chetna Ghura's dermatology pathway. The framework treats the dermatologist as the clinical decision-maker for assessment and recommendation across all pathways, and the consultation conversation produces the calibrated written plan that the patient leaves with. Procedural pathways follow at subsequent visits where the assessment supports them.

Common dermatology concerns presented at this clinic

What dermatology concerns are most often presented at the East of Kailash clinic?

The presenting-concern mix at the East of Kailash clinic reflects the broader urban-Delhi dermatology pattern. Acne and acne-scarring presentations are common across teenage and adult age groups, with hormonal-axis adult acne particularly prevalent in working-professional patients. Pigmentation presentations — melasma, post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation following acne, and selected hard-water-related pigment changes — are common across the patient population. Hair-fall and pattern hair-thinning presentations form a substantial part of the consultation mix. Anti-ageing pathway questions, laser-hair-reduction enquiries, and selected body-contouring questions complete the typical mix.

Are urban-Delhi air-quality factors discussed in the consultation?

Yes, where relevant to the presenting concern. The framework discusses Delhi air-quality patterns as a background factor in selected dermatology contexts — particularly for pollution-related skin-barrier patterns, oxidative-stress-driven pigmentation, and selected sensitivity contexts where the air-quality envelope influences trajectory. The Delhi pollution and skin guide covers the framework in patient-facing language. The framework does not over-claim air-quality as the primary cause of every skin pattern; it is one of several factors calibrated at the consultation.

Does hard water in Delhi affect skin and hair?

Hard-water exposure is a discussed factor in selected dermatology contexts in Delhi — particularly for hair-shaft and hair-quality patterns, selected scalp patterns, and selected skin-dryness patterns where the mineral envelope on the hair and skin matters. The framework discusses it where relevant to the presenting concern rather than as a generic blanket explanation. Calibration includes practical patient-side adjustments around shower-water filtration where it changes the trajectory and where it does not.

How does the framework handle Delhi-summer-versus-winter pattern shifts?

Selected dermatology patterns shift seasonally — sweat-and-sebum interaction in the summer months, post-monsoon humidity-related folliculitis and selected fungal patterns, post-Diwali-period air-quality dips, and the cold-and-dry winter months' barrier-stress patterns. The framework calibrates seasonal-context recommendations into the written plan rather than assuming a single year-round protocol. The seasonal skincare in India guide covers the framework in detail.

Is the clinic specialised in any particular skin or hair concern?

The dermatology pathway covers the standard MD-Dermatology scope across skin, hair, and selected procedural pathways for cosmetic-dermatology concerns. Within that scope the clinic operates structured pathway groupings for the common presenting concerns — acne and scarring, pigmentation, anti-ageing, hair-fall, laser-hair-reduction, and body-contouring contexts. The framework calibrates the recommendation to the case rather than channelling every patient toward a single in-house signature pathway.

Treatment pathways operated from East of Kailash

Which dermatology pathways are run from this address?

The full dermatology consultation framework operates from this address — calibrated assessment, photographic baseline establishment where the pathway warrants it, the written plan, and procedural pathways. Procedural categories include selected medical-dermatology routes, calibrated chemical peel pathways, calibrated laser-based pigmentation and resurfacing pathways, laser-hair-reduction across face and body zones, hair-restoration medical pathways, and energy-based body-contouring pathways. The skin treatments hub, hair treatments hub, and body treatments hub route to the specific pathway pages.

Are laser-based pathways calibrated for Indian skin?

Yes. Indian-skin Fitzpatrick III–VI pigmented contexts shape device-parameter selection across the laser-pathway groups — pigmentation-clearance routes, laser-hair-reduction, laser-resurfacing, and selected vascular pathways. Calibration is part of the suitability conversation at the consultation, including review of any prior pigmentation responses to thermal or chemical interventions. The laser safety on Indian skin page covers the technical framework.

What about acne and acne-scar pathways?

Acne management at the East of Kailash clinic follows the medical-dermatology framework — topical calibration, oral pathways where the case warrants them, calibrated procedural adjuncts for selected sub-types, and structured follow-up across the active-treatment-then-maintenance arc. Acne-scar pathways are calibrated to the scar architecture (atrophic ice-pick, rolling, boxcar, or selected hypertrophic patterns) and the patient's skin context. The acne and scars page covers the pathway logic in detail.

What about pigmentation and melasma pathways?

Pigmentation pathways at the clinic include the medical-pathway-first framework for melasma (where in-clinic pathways operate as adjuncts to the medical-management foundation rather than as a substitute), structured post-inflammatory pigmentation management, and selected calibrated laser-clearance pathways for non-melasma patterns. The pigmentation pillar page and melasma page cover the framework in patient-facing language. The framework does not promise a single-session clearance for melasma; calibrated multi-month management is the realistic frame.

What about hair-fall and laser-hair-reduction pathways?

Hair-fall and pattern hair-thinning pathways follow the medical-dermatology framework — assessment of pattern, cause-axis investigation where relevant, medical-pathway calibration, and structured monitoring across months. Laser-hair-reduction pathways are calibrated by skin-and-hair contrast, area, and patient-skin-context — face, body, and bikini zones each have specific calibration. The hair-fall page and laser hair reduction page cover the respective pathways. The LHR cost comparison page covers the cost framework.

The visit, the doctor, and follow-up

How is the consultation structured?

The consultation begins with history-taking around the presenting concern, proceeds to examination of the relevant area, may include photographic baseline establishment where the pathway warrants it, may include blood-work request where the picture suggests systemic context, and concludes with a calibrated written plan. The framework treats the visit as a clinical conversation rather than as a sales appointment. The dermatologist consultation page covers the framework, and the Doctor and Consultation FAQs covers credentials and decision-making.

Who will see me at the consultation?

The lead dermatologist is Dr Chetna Ghura, MBBS MD Dermatology, DMC 2851. The clinical decision-maker for assessment and recommendation across all pathways is the dermatologist; selected procedural protocols are operated by trained clinical-team members under the dermatologist's supervision. The Dr Chetna Ghura page covers the wider professional profile.

How is photography handled?

Where the pathway warrants a photographic baseline, the patient is informed before any capture and consents at the time. Default use is clinical-record-only — supporting the patient's own care and the clinical conversation at follow-up — and any other use requires separate explicit consent. The medical photography page covers the operational framework, and the formal Patient Consent and Photography Policy in the policies section carries the binding text.

How is pricing structured?

The dermatology consultation is priced at ₹1,999*, covering the visit time, the calibrated assessment, photographic baseline where applicable, blood-work interpretation when applicable, and the written plan. Procedural pathways are priced separately per their respective protocols and are calibrated case-by-case at the consultation rather than displayed as a website list price. The Pricing FAQs covers the framework in detail.

What about follow-up after the East of Kailash visit?

Follow-up cadence is calibrated to the pathway. Active procedural pathways are typically reviewed at the relevant response window. Maintenance pathways for hair-loss, pigmentation, and ageing trajectory are typically reviewed six-monthly to annually. Selected medical-dermatology pathways have their own review pattern. Selected follow-ups can be supported by video format where in-person examination is not necessary, per the formal Teleconsultation Policy in the policies section.

Visit format, walk-ins, and privacy

Are home visits or in-society visits offered?

No. The framework operates on a clinic-based dermatology consultation model rather than home-visit or in-society pop-up models. The reason is that calibrated clinical examination, photographic baseline establishment where applicable, and procedural-pathway operation each rely on clinic infrastructure (calibrated examination, lighting, hygiene protocol, equipment access). The framework is explicit that home-visit dermatology cannot replicate the calibration that the clinic visit produces.

Does the clinic accept walk-ins without appointment?

Walk-ins are not the standard model — the framework operates by prior appointment. Patient-flow planning, slot calibration to the case, and the dermatologist's consultation-window structure each rely on the appointment framework. Patients are encouraged to confirm bookings before visiting; emergency contexts are routed by phone where the situation requires.

How is patient privacy handled at the clinic?

Patient health information is treated as confidential and access-controlled per the Patient Privacy and Records Policy framework. The dermatologist and trained clinical-team members involved in care have appropriate access for that purpose; the framework does not pass patient information to third-party marketing parties without consent. The formal privacy policy carries the binding mechanics.

Booking and consultation

Bookings are confirmed through the clinic phone line at +91-92119-48111 and the website booking pathway. The consultation conversation produces the calibrated written plan that the patient leaves with; subsequent procedural decisions sit with the patient. The framework does not pressure same-day decisions and does not embed invented "act-now" promotional pricing.

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What this page does not cover

It does not list per-procedure pricing — those figures are calibrated at the consultation and embedded in the written plan; the Pricing FAQs covers the framework. It does not provide personalised medical advice — case-specific calibration sits at the consultation. It does not promise diagnosis without consultation; remote diagnosis from message-based exchange is outside the framework. It does not invent additional clinic branches, doctor availability outside the verified consultation hours, parking-and-transit specifics, external recognition lists, or patient-review counts that have not been independently verified.

Where to read more

For the consultation framework the dermatologist consultation page covers the visit structure. For the dermatologist profile the Dr Chetna Ghura page applies. For the standards layer the clinical approach page and the treatment suitability philosophy page cover decision-making. For first-visit specifics the First Visit FAQs covers preparation. For pricing the Pricing FAQs applies. For policies the medical disclaimer and the policy documents (refund, photography, teleconsultation, privacy, complaints) sit in the policies section. For the broader-area pages the South Delhi page and the Greater Kailash page cover the area framework.

Related internal links

Last reviewed: April 2026 · Next review due: April 2027 · Reviewed by: Dr Chetna Ghura, MBBS MD Dermatology, DMC 2851.

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