Bisset received her medical degree (M.B.) in 1905 from
Aberdeen University. She also received her CH.B. from Aberdeen and
Lady Literate in Arts degree from
St. Andrews University. She was an eye surgeon and obstetrician. She was one of the first women to work as a medical missionary in India. In 1910 to 1911, there was an epidemic of
Phagedaenic ulcer at
Palwal and Bisset worked with Dr. Young of the Women's Hospital of Palwal to treat about 600 patients. Both physicians were
Zenana medical missionaries who performed amputations and other necessary surgeries. She sought to reduce the rate of illness and death during childbirth. Bisset wrote that
puerperal sepsis was common due to unsanitary conditions, such as dirty bedding and cloths used during childbirth. Believing that circulating air was bad, women were shut up in rooms were a fire was burned to heat the room, regardless of the weather, and any opportunity for circulating air was blocked off. Women were prohibited from drinking water or milk if they developed puerperal sepsis, out of concern for a
purulent discharge. Bisset helped oversee the construction of a hospital for women in Bhiwani that opened in the fall of 1921. In 1931, she worked in Bhiwani at the
Zenana Baptist Mission Hospital. She helped Dr. Ellen Farrer provide medical care to girls and women. Both women were awarded the silver and gold
Kaisar-i-Hind Medal. ==Later years and death==