Dr Berlinde Drucker
Biography:
MD Anaesth
Dr Drucker is a highly experienced doctor, with many years of medical practise in both clinical settings and pharmaceutical research programmes.
Trained as a doctor originally at the Free University of Brussels, Belgium, she qualified as an anaesthesiologist in both Brussels and Montpelier, southern France, before returning to Brussels to work as an anaesthetist in one of the city’s largest public hospitals, where she stayed for several years.
She subsequently became head of clinical research and drug development trials for Upjohn in the Benelux countries, at that time one of the world’s largest pharmaceutical companies (now merged with pharmaceutical giant Pfizer).
She later moved to the USA, and then to the UK, working as an independent pharmaceutical consultant, work that involved projects not just here, but also in India and China.
Today she runs her own private practice, specialising in non-surgical medical aesthetic treatments, principally aimed at improving physical appearance to help fight the signs of ageing. Some of her treatments also have health applications, being highly effective in combatting excessive sweating (also called hyperhidrosis), migraine headaches and acne scarring.
In carrying out her treatments, Dr Drucker brings to this field a wealth of knowledge and skill in patient assessment and interaction, diagnosis, pain control, and treatment planning and execution. Moreover, she also brings her deeply held personal commitment to compassion, care and professional ethics, ensuring that you are treated with the utmost respect and discretion that begins with the very first consultation, and which doesn’t end until well after the final treatment. Her UK professional affiliations are:
Registered by the General Medical Council (GMC), registration number: 7201660
An Associate of the British College of Aesthetic Medicine (BCAM);
A life member of the Royal College of Medicine;
A member of the Faculty of Pharmaceutical Medicine;
A member of the British Medical Association (BMA).