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Norman Waterhouse FRCS (Plast)
A co-founder of WY Skin Clinic, Mr Norman Waterhouse is a highly-esteemed plastic surgeon in London – working at his own surgical practice – and a former President of both the British Association of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons (BAAPS) and Plastic Surgery Section of the RSM.
Mr Waterhouse’s early surgical training took place in Cambridge and Bristol and he became a Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons of England and the Royal College of Surgeons of Glasgow. His higher surgical training in Plastic Surgery was carried out in the UK as well France, Japan and Australia. A former Consultant in Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery to St Bartholomew’s Hospital and the Royal London Hospital, he was subsequently appointed as Lead Clinician and Director of the Craniofacial Unit at the Chelsea and Westminster Hospital.
Mr Waterhouse now works solely in private practice, undertaking all forms of cosmetic surgery in addition to reconstructive and facial surgery. He has published over fifty papers in medical literature, and has an active research and teaching profile, as well as regularly being an invited speaker and member of expert panels on international courses and conferences on facial aesthetic surgery. He has served as a member of the Editorial Advisory Board of the British Journal of Plastic Surgery.
In 2003 Mr Waterhouse co-founded the charity ‘Facing the World’ – treating children from developing countries with a wide variety of congenital facial conditions – and is a volunteer with Operation Smile, travelling to developing countries to perform cleft lip and palate surgery on children who would not otherwise be able to access surgery.
Mr Waterhouse is a full member of the British Association of Plastic, Reconstructive and Aesthetic Surgeons, the British Association of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons, the European Craniofacial Society, the International Society of Craniofacial Surgery and the International Society of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons. He is included in the Specialist Register established by the General Medical Council in 1995.