After a successful visit with Dr. D, I’ve been on the hunt to find a dermatologist who will be honest with my needs and concerns (like a skin care expert). I’ve found one that I’d be comfortable with and who will listen to my needs, including a full review of my skin care regimen.
Dr. D is one of those dermatologists who truly cares about your skin, but she’s not your regular dermatologist. She’s a “dermatologist” that practices in a clinic in San Antonio, Texas. In fact, her clinic is one of the only dermatological clinics in the country that accepts and treats patients without a medical license.
If you like a doctor that just wants to treat you like you are a number on a piece of paper, you might be interested in Dr. D.
Yes, that doctor who loves to perform surgical procedures on patients without anesthesia and doesn’t really care how it affects them? Well, Dr. D is one of those doctors. She also treats a lot of people in her clinic who are in desperate need of a doctor that doesn’t have time to see them in person, but she also takes care of people that have been diagnosed with skin cancer and they are in desperate need of a dermatologist that doesn’t mind seeing patients in their offices.
I remember the first time I performed a surgical procedure on someone. I went in and took a swab from the lesion and sent it to my lab for testing. The results came back in a few days, so I went home and was happy to be able to do something that I knew should have been done years ago.
Dr. Fishman is a dermatologist and the author of a book called A Doctor’s Guide to Skin Cancer. She’s also a celebrity dermatologist for a reason. One of her patients was a woman named Kim, who had been diagnosed with skin cancer. She was going to have to spend a lot of money to get rid of the cancer, but Dr. Fishman recommended she take the skin cancer “as is” and not try to do anything with it.
I had a little bit of my own experience with a skin cancer and this was the first time I ever heard of Dr. Fishman from patients or from the media. I was able to get her to recommend the procedure that I went through a couple of years ago in which I had a small tumour removed from the back of my neck. Because it was my first time and I was in my early 40s, it was a very risky procedure, but I am glad I did it.
While I’ve not had a cancer removed from my neck, I did have a couple of small surgeries in my 20s. In both of those surgeries I had to do a lot of other stuff, like have a pin inserted in my leg.
I had to have a pin inserted in my leg in order to be able to have a prosthetic wrist that would allow me to move my hand. I was born without that. Also, I am an amputee. I have no use of my right hand other than for writing and playing guitar.
Surgery is a good thing, but it can also be a very dangerous thing. I remember having the pin in my leg in my 20s. I have had a finger amputated in my late 20s. The pin, that was a very dangerous thing. In my 20s, I had to have a pin in my leg because I had one in my chest.