Top Aesthetic Practitioners in Stourbridge

Diane Porterfield

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Diane Porterfield

BSc (Hons) Nurse Practitioner

Rating
(142 reviews)
Location
Stourbridge DY9 9SY, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Simone Randhawa

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Simone Randhawa

Aesthetics Practitioner

Rating
( reviews)
Location
Stourbridge DY8 1AB, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Jo

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Jo

Aesthetics Practitioner

Rating
(5 reviews)
Location
Stourbridge DY9 0UG, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Natalie Welvaert

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Natalie Welvaert

Registered Nurse With The

Rating
(34 reviews)
Location
Stourbridge DY7 6HB, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Anisha

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Anisha

Therapist

Rating
( reviews)
Location
Stourbridge DY8 1AB, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

About Stourbridge

Population:

    • Approximately 63,000 (town level estimate
    • Dudley Metropolitan Borough ~323,000).

Lifestyle Characteristics:

    • Predominantly suburban, family-oriented demographics
    • High car ownership
    • Commuter population to Birmingham and wider West Midlands
    • Growing demand for non-surgical aesthetic treatments aligned with national UK cosmetic growth trends.

Medical Infrastructure:

    • Served by Russell’s Hall Hospital (Dudley Group NHS Foundation Trust)
    • Multiple GP practices
    • Proximity (~13 miles) to Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham
    • Established private dental and aesthetic sector presence.

Market Size

Number of Clinics:

8

Total Reviews:

258

Average Citywide Rating:

4.6375
Maturing non-surgical aesthetic market with established repeat client cycles.

Treatments

Regulatory & Compliance Environment

Primary Regulator:

  • Care Quality Commission (CQC) for regulated activities
  • Practitioner-level regulation via General Medical Council (GMC) and Nursing & Midwifery Council (NMC).

Prescribing Requirements:

  • Botulinum toxin classified as Prescription Only Medicine (POM)
  • Requires prescriber (GMC/GDC/NMC independent prescriber)
  • Remote prescribing subject to current MHRA and professional guidance.

Inspection Framework:

  • CQC inspection required if provider conducts regulated activities (e.g., surgical procedures, certain medical treatments)
  • Non-surgical cosmetic procedures often outside CQC scope unless regulated activities triggered.

Insurance & Financing

Private Insurance Usage:

  • Minimal for cosmetic procedures
  • Primarily self-funded treatments.

Cosmetic Finance Availability:

  • Selective availability for surgical procedures via third-party medical finance providers
  • Limited promotion among small independents.

Seasonality & Local Trends

Peak Booking Periods:

Pre-Christmas (November–December)Pre-summer (April–June)Early autumn corrective phase (September)

Social Media Trends:

Before-and-after transformationsEducational reels on anti-wrinkle and fillersClient testimonial videosPromotion of CPD training courses

Referral Networks & Teaching Hospital Links

Indirect linkage to University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust (Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham).

Accessibility & Location Factors

Public Transport Proximity:

  • Stourbridge Junction rail link to Birmingham Snow Hill
  • Local bus network coverage.

Parking Availability:

  • High car dependency
  • Town centre and suburban clinics typically offer on-site or nearby parking.

City Centre vs Suburban Distribution:

Mix of town-centre high street presence and suburban residential clinic settings.

Medical Tourism Potential

Tourism Volume Indicator:

  • Low standalone tourism draw
  • Benefits indirectly from West Midlands regional population (~2.9 million).

Hotel Density Near Clinics:

  • Limited hotel density within town
  • Greater availability in Birmingham.

Airport Proximity:

Approximately 25 miles to Birmingham Airport.

Overall Medical Tourism Viability:

  • Primarily local and regional catchment market
  • Low international medical tourism probability.