Immunology Clinic
How we can help you
We can help if you have problems with your immune system. This includes autoimmune and inflammatory diseases such as:
- Systemic lupus erythematosus and Sjogren's syndrome - autoimmune diseases in which your immune system attacks your own tissues causing inflammation and tissue damage.
- Vasculitis - inflammation of your blood vessels.
- IgG4-related disease and sarcoidosis - chronic inflammatory conditions.
- Inflammatory eye disease
- Immunodeficiency - your immune system is unable to fight infectious disease and cancer.
We also help you if you have allergy disorders such as:
- Anaphylaxis - severe allergic reaction.
- Eczema or atopic dermatitis - conditions which make your skin red and ichy.
- Allergic rhinoconjunctivitis - nose and eye problems due to allergies.
- Allergic asthma
- Drug, vaccine, food, or venom allergy
- Hives and angioedema - swelling beneath your skin.
- Nasal polyposis - non-cancerous growths in the lining of your nose or sinuses.
- Mastocytosis - a condition where certain immune cells called mast cells build up under your skin and/or in the bones, intestines and other organs.
Our services include:
- Allergy skin testing - applying substances to your skin to identify allergies. These include drug, allergens in the air, food, and venom.
- Allergen immunotherapy to treat allergic rhinitis, allergic asthma, and venom allergy
- Biologics - special medicines which help inflammation and allergy.
How to find us
Professorial Suite, Level 2, Campus Centre Building, Prince of Wales Hospital (building 16 on our campus map).
Our team includes specialist immunologists and doctors in training who assess, treat and help you to manage your immunological condition.
Our clinic consultants are:
- Dr James Yun
- Dr Mark Taylor
Clinic Name | Clinic Day | Clinic Time |
---|---|---|
Immunology Clinic | Monday | 9:00 am - 7:00 pm |
Immunology Clinic | Thursday | 1:00 pm - 5:00 pm |
Your local general practitioner (GP) or your specialist will decide if you need to use our services. If you need to make an appointment please ask your GP to fax us your referral letter with any blood test results. Fax number 02 9382 2400. If your appointment is urgent please ask your GP to call 02 9382 2403.
Referrals are reviewed and then allocated an appointment date.
One of our team will contact you within 7 days to schedule an appointment.
Wait times may vary. An urgent referral will be seen within 4 weeks. A non-urgent referral may be seen in up to 2 months.
If you provide your mobile phone number you will receive a SMS reminder 5 days before your appointment. Please let the Immunology Department know if you do not want to receive a SMS reminder.
If you need to change or cancel your appointment please telephone us on 02 9382 2403.
Please bring
- Your Medicare card.
- Recent blood test results. If you do not have a copy of your results, please bring the name of the pathology company that performed the test so we can follow up with them.
- Any scans and reports related to your hormone condition.
- A list of all the medicines you are currently taking including any herbal or over the counter medicines.
Please let us know if you need an interpreter. You can contact us telephoning the Translating and Interpreting Service (TIS) on 131 450. Tell the operator what language you speak and then ask the interpreter to set up a telephone conversation between you, an interpreter, and the healthcare professional you want to speak with.
NSW Telestroke Service
How we can help you
Prince of Wales Hospital in Sydney, hosts the NSW Telestroke Service. Our service supports hospitals in regional and remote NSW to care for people who have symptoms of stroke. This is a virtual, telehealth service, meaning our doctors provide services via telephone or videoconference.
Stroke A stroke is a serious medical emergency that occurs when there is a decrease in the blood supply to your brain and seriously affects its function. Urgent medical attention is required to prevent permanent damage or possibly death. If you are worried that you, or your family/friend is having a stroke, dial 000 immediately and ask for an ambulance.You can find the signs and symptoms for stroke in this Stroke Foundation information. |
Our service saves lives by providing immediate access to stroke specialists for urgent assessment, diagnosis and treatment. By using technology our doctors are able to work from another location to provide care in local hospitals, helping patients to stay close to home. We are able to provide this service 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
This video will show you how our service works to help you if you are having a stroke.
Campus Centre Level 0
Prince of Wales Hospital
Barker Street
Randwick NSW 2031
Medical Director
Professor Ken Butcher
Operations Manager
Claire Gill
Office hours
Mondays to Fridays, 8:00 am - 4:30 pm
Closed weekends.
How to find our office
Our team is based at Prince of Wales Hospital, Campus Centre Level 0
(Building 16 on our campus map).
Our team includes Doctors, nurses, and people skilled in information technology, radiology and administration. Our Doctors are specialised in caring for people who experience stroke and are based in Hospitals across NSW.
We work with rural and regional referral Hospitals that have the equipment, imaging and staffing to connect with our service.
Stroke is a medical emergency. If you are experiencing a stroke you need urgent diagnosis and treatment to prevent damage to your brain. If you, or a loved one, has had a stroke, call an ambulance. The ambulance will assess you and take you to a hospital that provides stroke care.
The Emergency Department will assess you further. If they think that you have had a stroke, they may call the NSW Telestroke Service and discuss your condition with a specialist doctor. The telestroke specialst doctor will ask the hospital to order some blood tests and imaging of your brain. The specialist doctor can see these images from their location and will work with the Emergency Department team to make a diagnosis and recommend treatment. The team looking after you will talk to you about the options, and can also talk to your family.
For more information on the NSW Telestroke Service see our patient information pamphlet.
Our stroke specialists will talk with you, your support person, and the local hospital team about your diagnosis, treatment and management options. If you or your support person are not able to be consulted prior to treatment, the telestroke doctor will make a treatment decision on your behalf to avoid delays and potentially increase your chance of recovery.
An ischaemic stroke is when you have a clot blocking a blood vessel and reducing the blood (and oxygen) being carried to your brain. The aim of treatment is to remove the blockage as quickly as we can and re-establish the blood flow to your brain. Two of the treatments are:
- Thombolysis - We give you a medicine that dissolves the clot and improves the blood flow. See our fact sheet for more information.
- Endovascular clot retrieval (ECR or thrombectomy) - When a large blood vessel in the brain is blocked, a procedure to remove the clot may provide your best chance of recovery. This can occur after thrombolysis has been used. See our fact sheet for more information.
NSW Telestroke is a virtual care service available 24/7.
It gives regional & remote hospitals access to tools and specialist neurology doctors who provide expert advice about treatment. The service is being rolled out statewide to 23 regional hospitals.
Delivering state-of-the-art stroke assessment and treatment across NSW – Professor Ken Butcher
A collaborative virtual approach with treatment tailored for each patient – Dr Timothy Ang
NSW Telestroke Service – insights from patients, carers and clinicians
NSW Telestroke Service – Rachel Peake: Tamworth
Transforming local stroke services – Kelly Andersen
Helping local doctors connect with specialist diagnosis and treatment – Rachel and Ben James
NSW Telestroke Service
How we can help you
Prince of Wales Hospital in Sydney, hosts the NSW Telestroke Service. Our service supports hospitals in regional and remote NSW to care for people who have symptoms of stroke. This is a virtual, telehealth service, meaning our doctors provide services via telephone or videoconference.
Stroke A stroke is a serious medical emergency that occurs when there is a decrease in the blood supply to your brain and seriously affects its function. Urgent medical attention is required to prevent permanent damage or possibly death. If you are worried that you, or your family/friend is having a stroke, dial 000 immediately and ask for an ambulance.You can find the signs and symptoms for stroke in this Stroke Foundation information. |
Our service saves lives by providing immediate access to stroke specialists for urgent assessment, diagnosis and treatment. By using technology our doctors are able to work from another location to provide care in local hospitals, helping patients to stay close to home. We are able to provide this service 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
This video will show you how our service works to help you if you are having a stroke.
Campus Centre Level 0
Prince of Wales Hospital
Barker Street
Randwick NSW 2031
Medical Director
Professor Ken Butcher
Operations Manager
Claire Gill
Office hours
Mondays to Fridays, 8:00 am - 4:30 pm
Closed weekends.
How to find our office
Our team is based at Prince of Wales Hospital, Campus Centre Level 0
(Building 16 on our campus map).
Our team includes Doctors, nurses, and people skilled in information technology, radiology and administration. Our Doctors are specialised in caring for people who experience stroke and are based in Hospitals across NSW.
We work with rural and regional referral Hospitals that have the equipment, imaging and staffing to connect with our service.
Stroke is a medical emergency. If you are experiencing a stroke you need urgent diagnosis and treatment to prevent damage to your brain. If you, or a loved one, has had a stroke, call an ambulance. The ambulance will assess you and take you to a hospital that provides stroke care.
The Emergency Department will assess you further. If they think that you have had a stroke, they may call the NSW Telestroke Service and discuss your condition with a specialist doctor. The telestroke specialst doctor will ask the hospital to order some blood tests and imaging of your brain. The specialist doctor can see these images from their location and will work with the Emergency Department team to make a diagnosis and recommend treatment. The team looking after you will talk to you about the options, and can also talk to your family.
For more information on the NSW Telestroke Service see our patient information pamphlet.
Our stroke specialists will talk with you, your support person, and the local hospital team about your diagnosis, treatment and management options. If you or your support person are not able to be consulted prior to treatment, the telestroke doctor will make a treatment decision on your behalf to avoid delays and potentially increase your chance of recovery.
An ischaemic stroke is when you have a clot blocking a blood vessel and reducing the blood (and oxygen) being carried to your brain. The aim of treatment is to remove the blockage as quickly as we can and re-establish the blood flow to your brain. Two of the treatments are:
- Thombolysis - We give you a medicine that dissolves the clot and improves the blood flow. See our fact sheet for more information.
- Endovascular clot retrieval (ECR or thrombectomy) - When a large blood vessel in the brain is blocked, a procedure to remove the clot may provide your best chance of recovery. This can occur after thrombolysis has been used. See our fact sheet for more information.
NSW Telestroke is a virtual care service available 24/7.
It gives regional & remote hospitals access to tools and specialist neurology doctors who provide expert advice about treatment. The service is being rolled out statewide to 23 regional hospitals.
Delivering state-of-the-art stroke assessment and treatment across NSW – Professor Ken Butcher
A collaborative virtual approach with treatment tailored for each patient – Dr Timothy Ang
NSW Telestroke Service – insights from patients, carers and clinicians
NSW Telestroke Service – Rachel Peake: Tamworth
Transforming local stroke services – Kelly Andersen
Helping local doctors connect with specialist diagnosis and treatment – Rachel and Ben James