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Indian Board Certified Plastic Surgeon
M.CH, MS, ISAPS Mentor
16000+ Cosmetic Surgeries
500+ Total Skin Care

Total skin care is a personalised plan combining daily home care with professional treatment — built around your skin type and your Fitzpatrick phototype. For Indian skin (typically Fitzpatrick III–V), two things matter more than anything else: protection from visible light, not just UV, and avoiding post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation from treatment that is too aggressive.

What Is Total Skin Care?

Total Skin Care — also known as comprehensive skincare, holistic skincare or all-inclusive skin therapy — is a personalised approach to maintaining and enhancing your skin’s health and appearance, combining daily home care with professional treatment.

  • Prevention, treatment, maintenance — the three pillars: preventing damage, treating existing concerns, and sustaining long-term skin vitality

  • Professional treatments — from chemical peels and laser therapies to medical facials

  • Personalised home routine — cleanser, sunscreen, actives, matched to your skin type

  • Every skin type — oily, dry, sensitive, combination or normal, cared for correctly

  • And every phototype — because Indian skin behaves differently under laser, light and acids than fair skin does

  • Also called — comprehensive skincare, complete skin care solution, holistic skincare, full skin treatment, all-inclusive skin therapy

“Total Skin Care Cost in India”

Total Skin Care Treatment Before & After Images

“Your Skin Whitening Treatment Cost”

Total Skin Care Testimonials: Fine To Fabulous Journeys

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Is Total Skincare right for you?

Total Skin Care: Your Complete Path to Healthy, Glowing Skin

If products haven’t worked and you don’t know where to start, Total Skin Care gives you a diagnosis-led plan — the right routine for your skin type, and professional treatment only where it’s genuinely needed.

  • Is your skin feeling dry, itchy, or lifeless even after trying multiple products?

  • Do acne, pigmentation, fine lines, or uneven texture lower your confidence every time you look in the mirror?

  • Are you confused about which skincare routine, products, or treatments are truly right for your unique skin type?

When your skin doesn’t reflect your inner vitality, it can affect your self-esteem, social presence, and even professional confidence. External factors like pollution, UV exposure, and dust, along with internal factors such as diet, aging, and hydration, can accelerate skin damage, making you feel helpless and frustrated.

That’s where Total Skin Care makes all the difference. This holistic approach is designed to provide 360° personalised care — from understanding your skin type to offering advanced medical treatments that restore, protect, and enhance your natural glow. It’s not just about short-term fixes; it’s about achieving long-lasting skin health. And for Indian skin specifically, it means getting two things right that most routines miss: protecting against visible light, not only UV, and choosing treatments that won’t leave post-inflammatory pigmentation behind.

Global & Indian Statistics (ISAPS 2024)

  • Globally, over 5 million skin-focused cosmetic treatments (lasers, peels, and rejuvenation) were performed in 2023, reflecting the rising demand for professional skincare.

  • India ranks among the top 10 countries for non-surgical skin rejuvenation procedures, with strong demand in cities like Mumbai, Delhi, and Bangalore.

Source: ISAPS Global Survey 2024

Related: Skin Whitening · Glutathione Injections · Dark Circle Removal · Acne Treatment · Stretch Mark Reduction

 

Quick Facts About Total Skin Care?

Total Skin Care - Quick Facts in Mumbai
Time Required 45-90 mins session
Anesthesia No Anesthesia required
Pain Level Minimal discomfort
Flyback 1–2 Days
Success Rate More than 95% to 98% satisfaction
Result Healthier, glowing skin in 2-3 weeks
Diet No Restrictions
Complication Rate Less than 1% temporary redness
Cost in Mumbai INR 10,000 to 50,000 Approx.

“Total Skin Care Cost in India”

Skin types vary based on genetics, lifestyle, and environment. The five main types are dry, oily, combination, sensitive, and normal — and each needs a different routine.

1. Dry skin

  • Rough skin texture; peeling or flaking; itchiness and irritation; cracks and fine lines; a ‘dry riverbed’ appearance on the legs; dandruff on the scalp.

2. Oily skin

  • Excessive oil or shine; smooth texture; higher risk of acne flare-ups. Appears shiny due to excess sebum production.

3. Combination or balanced skin

  • Oily forehead, nose and chin (the T-zone); dry cheeks, jawline or hairline; may result from product overuse or environmental factors.

4. Sensitive skin

  • Reacts to dyes, chemicals or fragrances; prone to redness and burning; often linked with hidden conditions or allergies.

5. Normal skin

  • Even skin tone and texture; small, less visible pores; low risk of blemishes or sensitivity.

“Total Skin Care Cost in India”

The Fitzpatrick phototype classifies skin by how it responds to sun exposure, from Type I (always burns, never tans) to Type VI (never burns, deeply pigmented). Most Indian skin falls in Types III to V — and that determines which treatments are safe for you.

  • Why it matters more than ‘oily or dry’ — phototype predicts your risk of burns, rebound darkening and post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation after any energy-based or chemical treatment

  • Melanin is protective and reactive — it shields against UV, but it also responds to injury and inflammation by producing more pigment

  • Laser settings must change — what is safe for Fitzpatrick II is not safe for Fitzpatrick V. This is why a laser treatment should never be booked from a price list

  • IPL needs particular caution — intense pulsed light carries a higher risk of burns and rebound hyperpigmentation in darker phototypes; longer-wavelength options such as Q-switched Nd:YAG 1064 nm are generally considered safer. Discuss this before any photofacial

  • Peels should be conservative — low-concentration glycolic, mandelic or salicylic acid, built up slowly, rather than deep resurfacing

  • Test patches matter — for any first laser or peel in Fitzpatrick IV–VI skin

  • The commonest mistake — treating Indian skin with protocols designed for fair skin, then treating the resulting pigmentation as a new problem

Source: Visible light and hyperpigmentation in skin of colour — Int J Dermatol (2024)

🩺 Dr. Milan Doshi’s note: “Before any laser or peel, I assess the patient’s Fitzpatrick skin type and pigmentation tendency. For Indian skin, I use conservative settings and test patches when needed to reduce burns and PIH. I also advise against unsupervised fairness creams, which can worsen sensitivity and pigmentation.”

“Total Skin Care Cost in India”

Skin concerns vary with age, lifestyle, and genetics. The most common issues are acne, pigmentation, wrinkles, dullness, and scars — and in Indian skin, pigmentation is by far the most frequent.

  • Acne: breakouts, blackheads and whiteheads caused by excess oil and clogged pores. See acne treatment

  • Pigmentation: dark spots, melasma or uneven tone from sun, hormones or ageing. See pigmentation treatment and Cosmelan peel

  • Wrinkles: fine lines and sagging from loss of collagen and elasticity. See anti-ageing treatment

  • Dullness: tired-looking, uneven skin caused by stress, poor diet or lack of exfoliation.

  • Scars: marks left by acne, injury or surgery. See scar revision and microneedling

  • Post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation: dark marks left behind AFTER acne, injury or an over-aggressive treatment — the defining concern of Indian skin, and absent from the live page

“Total Skin Care Cost in India”

Proper skin care protects the skin barrier, prevents avoidable damage, and supports long-term skin health — which is what produces the appearance people describe as glow.

  • Barrier protection — an intact skin barrier resists irritation, infection and water loss

  • Prevention beats correction — daily sun protection prevents pigmentation and photoageing that are far harder to treat later

  • Self-confidence — clear, comfortable skin genuinely affects how people feel and present themselves

  • Long-term skin health — regular care prevents premature ageing, pigmentation and chronic skin concerns

  • Early detection — people who look at their skin regularly notice changing moles and non-healing lesions sooner

“Total Skin Care Cost in India”

A consistent daily skin care routine — cleanse, protect, moisturise, and one active at night — does more for your skin than any single treatment.

  • Sun protection — broad-spectrum SPF 30 or higher every morning. Reapply every 2 hours when outdoors, and after swimming or sweating

  • Apply enough — most people use a quarter to half of the tested amount. Two finger-lengths of product covers the face and neck

  • Cleansing — a gentle, pH-balanced cleanser suited to your skin type. Avoid alkaline bar soap on the face

  • Moisturiser — lightweight water-based for oily or normal skin; richer, ceramide-containing for dry skin

  • Vitamin C serum — in the morning, to brighten and support collagen. Allow 8–12 weeks

  • Retinoid at night — start low and slow, twice a week, building up. Expect an adjustment period of dryness and flaking

  • Retinoids and pregnancy — topical retinoids are generally avoided in pregnancy and while trying to conceive. Ask your doctor

  • Don’t over-exfoliate — over-exfoliation is the commonest cause of a damaged barrier, and in Indian skin it drives pigmentation

  • Consistency — a simple routine done daily beats an elaborate one done occasionally

“Total Skin Care Cost in India”

Daily sun protection is the single most effective skin care step. But for Indian skin, standard sunscreen is not enough: visible light also drives pigmentation, and only iron-oxide tinted sunscreens protect against it.

Why plain SPF isn’t enough for Indian skin

  • Sunlight is mostly not UV — roughly 5–7% of solar radiation reaching the skin is ultraviolet; around 45% is visible light

  • Visible light causes pigmentation — and does so disproportionately in darker skin, independently of UV

  • Standard sunscreens don’t block it — in one study, an iron-oxide formulation significantly protected Fitzpatrick IV skin against visible-light-induced pigmentation, while a mineral SPF 50+ sunscreen without iron oxide did not

  • The fix is tint — iron oxides physically block visible light. A published review concludes that tinted sunscreens containing iron oxides should be recommended over non-tinted ones for anyone prone to hyperpigmentation

  • It also prevents melasma relapse — tinted sunscreens are more effective than non-tinted at preventing melasma recurrence, and may enhance the depigmenting effect of topical hydroquinone

  • Bonus — tinted mineral formulas avoid the white cast that makes many people skip sunscreen altogether

The rest of the routine

  • Antioxidants — vitamin C, vitamin E or niacinamide serums help neutralise free radicals from pollution

  • Protective clothing — wide-brimmed hats, sunglasses, long sleeves. Shade beats any cream

  • Cleanse at night — to remove particulate pollution, sunscreen and sebum, with a gentle cleanser

  • Barrier repair — ceramide moisturisers support the skin barrier in polluted, humid cities

Sources: Zhou et al., Guide to tinted sunscreens in skin of color, Int J Dermatol (2024), Iron-oxide formulations vs mineral SPF 50+ against visible-light pigmentation in Fitzpatrick IV, JDD, PubMed abstract

“Total Skin Care Cost in India”

Healthy skin has a slightly acidic surface — the acid mantle — at around pH 4.5 to 5.5. Traditional bar soaps are strongly alkaline (pH 8–11), and frequent use raises skin pH and impairs barrier repair. For facial skin, a gentle pH-balanced cleanser or a syndet bar is the better choice.

What the dermatology literature says

  • The acid mantle matters — a mildly acidic surface pH supports barrier function, enzyme activity and the skin’s defence against bacteria

  • Alkaline soap raises skin pH — washing with alkaline soap can raise skin pH by several units for up to about 90 minutes, and frequent use causes a sustained rise with impaired barrier repair

  • It is linked to skin disease — altered skin pH plays a role in irritant contact dermatitis, atopic dermatitis and acne vulgaris

  • Syndets are the alternative — synthetic detergent bars are formulated at neutral or slightly acidic pH and are recognised as milder

  • It matters most if — you have dry, sensitive, eczema-prone or barrier-compromised skin, or you are using retinoids or acids

What to look for

  • Oily or acne-prone skin — a gentle foaming or gel cleanser, or an acidic syndet bar; not an alkaline soap

  • Dry skin — a hydrating cream or milky cleanser

  • Sensitive skin — fragrance-free, non-foaming, minimal ingredients

  • Ignore TFM — total fatty matter is a soap-manufacturing quality grade. It tells you about the soap, not about your skin’s pH or barrier

  • Ignore ‘brightening’ soaps — no soap lightens skin. Contact time is seconds, and active ingredients wash off

Sources: Acid mantle: what we need to know — Indian J Dermatol Venereol Leprol, Impact of cleanser pH on maintaining a healthy skin barrier — JAAD, Skin cleansing without or with compromise: soaps and syndets — PMC

“Total Skin Care Cost in India”

When daily care isn’t enough, medical skin care treatments target deeper concerns — pigmentation, wrinkles, acne scars and volume loss. The right choice depends on your concern, your skin type and your phototype.

  • Chemical peels — skin peels exfoliate damaged layers to improve texture and pigmentation. In darker skin, start with low-concentration glycolic, mandelic or salicylic acid

  • Laser treatments — fractional CO2, Q-switched and IPL target wrinkles, scars and uneven tone. Device and settings must match your phototype

  • Microneedling — dermaroller and microneedling radiofrequency stimulate collagen and improve acne scars with minimal downtime

  • PRP — platelet-rich plasma uses your own growth factors. Evidence for facial rejuvenation is weaker than for hair; it must be performed with sterile, single-use equipment

  • Medical facials — hydrafacial, oxygeneo and infusion therapies give hydration and immediate glow, with modest lasting change

  • Injectables — dermal fillers and anti-ageing injections restore volume and soften lines

  • A consultation decides — not a price list. Book with a board-certified surgeon or dermatologist

“Total Skin Care Cost in India”

Modern anti-ageing treatments soften lines, restore volume and improve firmness — usually in combination rather than alone.

  • Anti-ageing injections — botulinum toxin smooths dynamic wrinkles such as frown lines, crow’s feet and forehead creases by relaxing overactive muscles

  • Dermal fillers — fillers restore lost facial volume, lift sagging areas and soften deep folds

  • Skin tightening — non-surgical radiofrequency or HIFU boost collagen and improve elasticity

  • Thread lifts — threads lift sagging cheeks, jawline and brows while stimulating collagen

  • Or non-surgical facelift — see the combined approach

  • Realistic expectations — these soften and refresh; they do not reverse structural ageing. A surgeon will tell you when surgery is the honest answer

“Total Skin Care Cost in India”

The dominant risk of aesthetic skin care treatment in Indian skin is post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation (PIH) — dark marks that appear after the skin is inflamed by a peel, laser or aggressive product. It is common, it is preventable, and it takes months to fade.

Post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation

  • What it is — melanocytes respond to inflammation by producing excess pigment; the treated area darkens instead of clearing

  • Who is at risk — anyone with Fitzpatrick III–VI skin. That is most Indian patients

  • What causes it — peels or lasers that are too deep, IPL at the wrong settings, over-exfoliation, picking at acne, and unprotected sun exposure afterwards

  • How to avoid it — conservative settings, test patches, staged sessions, strict photoprotection, and a practitioner who knows Indian skin

  • It resolves slowly — over months, not weeks. Prevention is the entire strategy

Other risks worth knowing

  • Burns and blistering — from lasers or IPL used at settings intended for fair skin

  • Barrier damage — from over-exfoliation, layering too many actives, or alkaline soap

  • Infection — any treatment that breaks the skin barrier, including microneedling and PRP, requires sterile single-use equipment

  • Cold sore reactivation — after resurfacing procedures, in people with a history of herpes labialis

  • Unregulated fairness creams — over-the-counter skin-lightening products in India may contain potent topical steroids or unlabelled ingredients. Prolonged facial use can cause thinning, redness, acneiform eruptions and dependence. Never use a prescription steroid cream as a cosmetic [clinic to confirm its position and add clinical detail]

  • When to call the clinic — spreading redness, blistering, fever, unusual pain, or darkening of the treated area

“Total Skin Care Cost in India”

Every skin type needs a personalised skin care routine. The principles are the same — cleanse gently, protect daily, moisturise appropriately, introduce actives slowly — but the products differ.

  • Oily skin — a gentle foaming or gel cleanser, oil-free moisturiser, non-comedogenic sunscreen. Exfoliate at most 2–3 times weekly, and stop if skin becomes irritated

  • Dry skin — hydrating cream cleanser, rich moisturiser with ceramides or hyaluronic acid, always layer sunscreen

  • Sensitive skin — fragrance-free, hypoallergenic products. Soothing ingredients such as aloe vera and centella. Avoid harsh scrubs and strong acids

  • Mature skin — retinoids and peptides, antioxidant serum in the morning, and non-negotiable SPF

  • Acne-prone skin — a pH-balanced cleanser, not alkaline soap. Salicylic acid, benzoyl peroxide or prescription retinoids under guidance

  • Pregnancy — avoid retinoids and check any active with your doctor. Azelaic acid and vitamin C are commonly considered suitable

  • Introduce one active at a time — so you know what worked and what irritated

“Total Skin Care Cost in India”

Diet and lifestyle support skin health, but they are not a substitute for sun protection or treatment. A balanced diet, adequate sleep and managed stress all help — modestly and gradually.

  • Nutrition — fruit, vegetables, lean protein, omega-3 fatty acids and antioxidants support skin repair

  • Hydration — drink to thirst. The evidence that extra water improves skin appearance in well-hydrated people is weak

  • Exercise — improves circulation and sleep quality, both of which help the skin

  • Stress and sleep — chronic stress worsens acne, eczema and psoriasis. Sleep is when repair happens

  • Smoking — accelerates photoageing and impairs healing after any procedure

  • Realistic framing — no diet reverses sun damage. Sunscreen does more than any supplement

“Total Skin Care Cost in India”

See a doctor when a skin problem persists, worsens, scars, or changes. Some skin concerns are medical rather than cosmetic — and one of them, skin cancer, is time-critical.

  • Persistent acne — breakouts that don’t improve with over-the-counter products, or that leave scars

  • Sudden pigmentation — dark patches or melasma appearing suddenly may indicate a hormonal or medical cause

  • Premature wrinkles — significant lines or laxity before your thirties

  • Chronic irritation — redness, itching or burning lasting beyond a week despite basic care

  • A damaged skin barrier — stinging, redness and sensitivity after over-treating at home

Suspicious growths — the ABCDE rule

  • A — Asymmetry: one half of the mole does not match the other

  • B — Border: edges are irregular, ragged or blurred

  • C — Colour: more than one colour, or uneven colour

  • D — Diameter: larger than about 6 mm, though melanomas can be smaller

  • E — Evolving: changing in size, shape, colour, or newly itching or bleeding

  • Any non-healing lesion — a sore that does not heal within a few weeks should be examined. Do not have a suspicious mole removed for cosmetic reasons before it has been assessed; see mole, wart and skin tag removal

“Total Skin Care Cost in India”

The cost of Total Skin Care in Mumbai ranges from about ₹2,000 per basic session to ₹50,000 for injectable or programme-based care, depending on the treatments chosen, your skin condition, and the number of sessions. EMI options are on our payment process page.

Treatment tierTypical cost (Mumbai)Note
Basic (facials, peels, microdermabrasion)₹2,000–₹6,000 per sessionUsually a course of 4–6
Advanced (laser, PRP, microneedling)₹6,000–₹15,000 per session3–6 sessions typical
Injectables (toxin, fillers, thread lifts)₹15,000–₹50,000By area and product
Customised programme₹25,000 onwardsPlan designed after consultation
  • What changes the price — treatment type, number of sessions, product used, and clinic accreditation.
  • Ask for the course total — not the per-session price. Almost every treatment here needs a course.
  • Budget for maintenance — and for sunscreen, which does more for your result than any add-on. Book a consultation for an exact plan.

“Total Skin Care Cost in India”

Dr. Milan Doshi leads Total Skin Care at Allure Medspa, with treatment plans built around your skin type, your Fitzpatrick phototype, and realistic expectations.

  • Board-certified — Indian board-certified plastic surgeon; M.Ch, MS; ISAPS Mentor; 27+ years

  • 500+ Total Skin Care patients — [clinic to confirm; the meta title says 5000+]

  • Comprehensive care — peels, lasers, PRP, microneedling, injectables and thread lifts, matched to skin type

  • Safety-first — NABH/ISO-standard facilities, sterile single-use protocols, informed consent

  • Honest counsel — including when a treatment is wrong for your phototype, and when the answer is a dermatologist

“Total Skin Care Cost in India”

Allure Medspa offers Total Skin Care under one roof — from medical facials to lasers, injectables and surgery — which means the recommendation can fit your skin rather than the price list.

  • Expert leadership — Dr. Milan Doshi, ISAPS-affiliated, 27+ years

  • Comprehensive services — peels, PRP, microneedling, lasers, injectables and thread lifts

  • International standards — NABH and ISO-certified facility, sterile single-use protocols

  • Built for Indian skin — phototype assessment, conservative staging, and prevention of post-inflammatory pigmentation

  • Personalised care — plans based on skin type, lifestyle and long-term goals; see all skin treatments, and our outstation patients guide

“Total Skin Care Cost in India”

ICD-10 Codes for Total Skin Care

ICD-10 CodeDescription
L98.8Other specified disorders of skin and subcutaneous tissue (general skin conditions)
R23.8Other specified skin changes (wrinkles, sagging, pigmentation issues)
L81.9Disorder of pigmentation, unspecified (hyperpigmentation, melasma, uneven tone)
L73.9Follicular disorder, unspecified (acne, clogged pores)
Z41.1Encounter for cosmetic procedure (general cosmetic skin care treatments)

CPT Codes for Total Skin Care

CPT CodeDescription
15788Chemical peel, facial; epidermal
15789Chemical peel, facial; dermal
15792Chemical peel, nonfacial; epidermal
15793Chemical peel, nonfacial; dermal
17380Electrolysis epilation, each 30 minutes (for unwanted hair)
17999Unlisted procedure, skin, mucous membrane, and subcutaneous tissue (used for PRP, mesotherapy, or non-coded cosmetic procedures)
96999Unlisted special dermatological service or procedure (used for advanced facials, laser facials, etc.)

Q1. Which treatment is best for my skin?

Ans. It depends on your concern AND your Fitzpatrick phototype. Peels help pigmentation and texture; lasers address scars and tone; microneedling improves acne scarring; injectables address lines and volume. In Indian skin, the safest effective option is often the more conservative one.

Q2. Is bar soap bad for facial skin?

Ans. Traditional bar soap is alkaline (pH 8–11), while your skin’s acid mantle is pH 4.5–5.5. Frequent use raises skin pH and impairs barrier repair, and altered skin pH is linked to irritant dermatitis, eczema and acne. Use a gentle pH-balanced cleanser or a syndet bar on the face.

Q3. Does a soap’s TFM grade matter for my skin?

Ans. TFM (total fatty matter) is a manufacturing quality grade for soap. It tells you about the soap’s fat content, not about your skin’s pH, barrier or health. A high-TFM alkaline soap is still alkaline.

Q4. Can any soap lighten skin or remove tan?

Ans. No. Contact time is seconds and actives rinse away. Tan and pigmentation respond to sun protection, topical actives and, where appropriate, professional treatment.

Q5. What sunscreen should Indian skin use?

Ans. Broad-spectrum SPF 30 or higher — and ideally a tinted formula containing iron oxides. Iron oxides block visible light, which drives pigmentation in darker skin and which ordinary sunscreens do not filter. A published review recommends tinted sunscreens over non-tinted ones for anyone prone to hyperpigmentation.

Q6. Do I need sunscreen indoors or in front of screens?

Ans. Screen light is not the concern. A 2024 review notes visible light from computer and phone screens is 100 to 1000 times less intense than sunlight and has not been shown to worsen melasma in the short term. Sunlight through windows is a different matter — if you sit near a window, a tinted sunscreen is worthwhile.

Q7. How often should I reapply sunscreen?

Ans. Every two hours when you are outdoors, and after swimming or sweating. Reapplying every 3–4 hours indoors is not evidence-based. Applying enough matters more: about two finger-lengths for the face and neck.

Q8. What is post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation?

Ans. Dark marks left after the skin is inflamed — by acne, injury, or a peel or laser that was too aggressive. It affects Fitzpatrick III–VI skin disproportionately, takes months to fade, and is the reason Indian skin should be treated conservatively.

Q9. Are lasers safe for Indian skin?

Ans. Yes, with the right device and settings. IPL carries a higher risk of burns and rebound pigmentation in darker phototypes. Ask which device will be used, what your Fitzpatrick type is, and whether a test patch will be done.

Q10. How often should I get skin treatments?

Ans. Most maintenance treatments suit a 4–6 week interval. Active concerns like acne or pigmentation may need a closer course under supervision. More frequent is not better — over-treatment causes pigmentation.

Q11. When will I see results from my home routine?

Ans. Retinoids and vitamin C generally take 8 to 12 weeks. Anyone promising visible change in 2–3 weeks is selling you something.

Q12. Can I use retinol in pregnancy?

Ans. Topical retinoids are generally avoided during pregnancy and while trying to conceive. Ask your doctor. Azelaic acid and vitamin C are commonly considered suitable alternatives.

Q13. Are over-the-counter fairness creams safe?

Ans. Unregulated skin-lightening products may contain potent topical steroids or unlabelled ingredients. Prolonged facial use can thin the skin and cause redness, acneiform eruptions and dependence. Never use a prescription steroid cream as a cosmetic.

Q14. When should I see a doctor about a mole?

Ans. Use the ABCDE rule: Asymmetry, irregular Border, uneven Colour, Diameter over about 6 mm, or Evolving — changing, itching or bleeding. Any non-healing sore should be examined. Never have a suspicious mole removed cosmetically before assessment.

Q15. Does drinking more water improve my skin?

Ans. Drink to thirst. The evidence that additional water improves skin appearance in well-hydrated people is weak, and water does not ‘flush toxins’ from skin.

Q16. How much does total skin care cost in Mumbai?

Ans. Roughly ₹2,000 per basic session up to ₹50,000 for injectable or programme-based care. Ask for the total course cost.

“Total Skin Care Cost in India”

Speak to Our Friendly & Knowledgeable Adviser:

Note: The author of this content is Dr. Milan Doshi, An Indian board-certified plastic & cosmetic Surgeon wholly & solely confirms the authenticity of the information & knowledge delivered by this write-up.

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Dr. Milan Doshi, Indian Board Certified
Celebrity Cosmetic Surgeon
27+ Years of Experience | 16000+ Surgeries

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