Homeopathic consultations for recurring skin concerns in Naraina, Delhi
Unhurried case-taking for recurring itch, dry patches, flare-ups and scratching that disrupts sleep — alongside your dermatologist and existing medical care.
Dr. Yashasvi Verma · MD (Hom.) — B.R. Ambedkar University, Agra
Does this skin pattern feel familiar?
Itching that keeps returning
It settles for a while, then the urge to scratch starts all over again.
Dry, rough patches
The area feels tight and uncomfortable even when the rest of your skin feels normal.
Scratching that disturbs sleep
Bedtime brings the itch back, and you wake tired from scratching through the night.
Flare-ups that return
A patch calms down, then heat, weather or an ordinary day seems to set it off again.
Skin that reacts after contact
A soap, fragrance, fabric, metal or new product seems to be followed by itching or stinging.
Heat, sweat or winter-dryness patterns
Some weeks it is sweat and friction; in colder weeks the same area feels dry and irritable.
How a skin consultation works
Map the flare, not just today's patch.
We start with the timeline — where the itch returns, when it is worse, what changed around it, and how long each episode lasts.
Bring the full skin-care record.
Soaps, creams, prescriptions, supplements, allergies and old reports all belong in the same conversation. Nothing you already use is changed without the clinician who prescribed it.
Tell us what happens at night.
Scratching, broken sleep and morning tiredness help describe the real burden of the pattern, not just what is visible in the room.
Review the pattern with the same doctor.
Follow-ups compare the current picture with the first visit's notes and keep the dermatologist or another prescriber in the loop.

Your first visit for a skin concern
- 1
Map the timeline
We record when the pattern began, where it returns, what was happening around each flare, and what has already been tried.
- 2
Review the record
Bring current products and prescriptions, sleep notes, daily exposures, known allergies, reports and any specialist advice.
- 3
Agree the next step
The clinic explains its plan, how reviews will use the same record, and anything that should stay with or return to a dermatologist.

Your doctor
Dr. Yashasvi Verma
MD (Hom.) — B.R. Ambedkar University, Agra
With a recurring skin concern, I want to understand the sequence — when it began, what brings the itch back, what you apply, and what happens to your sleep. I keep that record across reviews and I will also tell you clearly when the next step belongs with a dermatologist or urgent medical care.
More about Dr. VermaBooking for someone else?
Bring the current creams and medicines, any past prescriptions or reports, and a short note on when scratching is worst — especially what happens around sleep. Keep your paediatrician or dermatologist informed about every form of care.
Bring an up-to-date medicine list and help map when the itching or patches began, what is applied now, and whether the skin is painful, broken or affecting sleep. The consultation will also flag anything that needs a dermatologist or another medical doctor.
Questions about recurring skin concerns
What should I note for the first visit?
Note when the itch or patch began, where it returns, what seems to precede it, what happens at night, and everything you currently apply or take. Bring past prescriptions, reports and your current medicine list.
Can homeopathic care be used alongside my dermatologist's medicines?
Bring the complete list to the consultation and keep every treating clinician informed. Do not stop, reduce or replace a prescribed medicine on your own; changes belong with the clinician who prescribed it.
Should I stop a topical steroid or antihistamine for the visit?
No. Continue prescribed care unless the prescriber tells you otherwise. The clinic needs an accurate list of what you use and how often; it does not need you to create an untreated flare for the appointment.
Why does the consultation ask about sleep, stress, weather and products?
Those details help map timing and burden: when the itch returns, what changed around it, and how it affects daily life. They are recorded as patterns, not assumed to be the diagnosis.
Does itching at night matter?
Yes — note when scratching starts, whether it wakes you or your child, and whether the skin becomes broken. Sleep disruption is part of the concern's burden and can also help the doctor decide whether another clinician is needed.
When should I go to a dermatologist or hospital first?
Sudden mouth, tongue or throat swelling or trouble breathing needs emergency care. Fever with a rash, rapidly spreading or painful skin, widespread blisters, eye or mouth involvement, pus or yellow crust also needs prompt medical assessment.
Are online consultations available for skin concerns?
Yes. The clinic offers online consultations for skin concerns.
What ages does the clinic see for skin concerns?
Patients aged 18 and over can consult independently. Anyone under 18 is seen with a parent or guardian present; the parent or guardian gives the history and provides consent.
Visit details
- Clinic hours
- Mon · Wed · Fri — 11 am – 2 pm
- Tue · Thu · Sat — 11 am – 2 pm & 6 pm – 9 pm
- Sun — Closed
Near Naraina Vihar Metro Station
Ready when you are
No preparation needed — just bring your story and any current prescriptions.
For sudden swelling of the lips, mouth, tongue or throat, or trouble breathing, call 112 / 108 or go to a hospital now. For fever with a rash, rapidly spreading or painful skin, wide blistering, or signs of infection, seek a dermatologist or medical doctor promptly.








