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Our Hospitals

Our hospitals are committed to patients when they need help most – experience emergency with AEA!

Work up cases, diagnose and treat patients, and interact with a great team of veterinary professionals dedicated towards better patient outcomes.

Carrara

  • 07 5559 1599
  • 104 Eastlake St, Carrara QLD 4211
  • Directions:
  • Opening Hours

    Mon-Thu: 6pm to 8am
    Weekends: Fri 6pm until Mon 8am
    Public Holidays: 24 Hours
    No appointment required.

Hobart

  • 1300 302 912
  • 37 Derwent Park Rd, Moonah TAS 7009
  • Directions:
  • Opening Hours

    24 hours a day. 365 Days a year

    No appointment required.

Jindalee

  • 07 3715 9999
  • 34 Goggs Rd, Jindalee QLD 4074
  • Directions:
  • Opening Hours

    Mon-Thu: 6pm to 8am
    Weekends: Fri 6pm until Mon 8am
    Public Holidays: 24 Hours
    No appointment required.

North Coast

  • 0424054056
  • Unit 1 Bangalow Business Centre 1 Dudgeons Ln, Bangalow NSW 2479
  • Directions:
  • Opening Hours

    24 hours a day. 365 Days a year.
    No appointment required.

Tanawha

  • 07 5445 1333
  • 431 Tanawha Tourist Dr, Tanawha QLD 4556
  • Directions:
  • Opening Hours

    Open 24/7
    365 days a year
    No appointment required.
    Walk-ins welcome.

Underwood

  • 07 3423 1888
  • 1 Lexington Road, Underwood QLD 4119
  • Directions:
  • Opening Hours

    Mon-Thu: 6pm to 8am
    Weekends: Fri 6pm until Mon 8am
    Public Holidays: 24 Hours
    No appointment required.

Hawthorn East

  • 03 9000 6868
  • 395 Tooronga Rd, Hawthorn East VIC 3123
  • Directions:
  • Opening Hours

    24/7
    365 days a year

    No appointment required.

Hope Island

  • 07 5530 1105
  • 67 Crescent Ave, Hope Island QLD 4212
  • Directions:
  • Opening Hours

    Mon-Fri: 8am-6pm
    Sat: 8am-12pm
    Sun: Closed

Cannington

  • (08) 9207 5207
  • T26, Primewest Cannington 1490 Albany Highway, Cannington, 6107, WA
  • Directions:
  • Opening Hours
    Open 24/7
    365 Days a year
    No appointment required

Yokine

  • 08 9207 5200
  • 3/162 Wanneroo Road, Yokine, WA 6060
  • Directions:
  • Opening Hours
    Mon-Thu: 6pm – 8am
    Weekends: Fri 6pm until Mon 8am
    Public holidays: 24 hours
    No appointment required

Canberra

  • 02 6225 7257
  • 2 Barton Highway Lyneham, ACT 2602
  • Directions:
  • Opening Hours
    • 24 hours on weekends
    • 24 hours on public holidays
    • Every night of the week from 6pm until 8am

Hospital Research

The Australian Paralysis Tick Advisory Panel

The Australian Paralysis Tick Advisory Panel, an initiative supported by Boehringer Ingelheim, established clinical guidelines for the management of tick paralysis in Australia.Your personal and professional development is important to us and we have a number of training programs and courses available to our team members.

Recently, the panel reconvened to review and update the guidelines based on the latest literature. Our very own veterinarians Dr Ellie Leister and Dr Rob Webster sit on this panel to help answer important questions about this life-threatening condition and the parasite that causes it: the paralysis tick.

VetAPedia

Advance your emergency veterinary knowledge and achieve better patient outcomes with 200+ free veterinary resources for you to access at any time.

Emergency veterinarians are exposed to a wide gamut of issues, and often the most critical patients. Given that specialists are often unavailable at 1 am, it's essential that you have access to the latest Emergency & Critical Care resources available. This is why we’ve built VetApedia.

VetAPedia is a collection of resources, journal reviews, veterinary blog articles and clinical content, designed specifically for Veterinary professionals.

Veterinary Journal Club book open on table

Journal Club

Can’t get enough? Want to discuss the latest in research with fellow peers? Join our journal club on the Sunshine Coast.

Our regular gathering of vets is pretty casual, often combined with a cold pint or a delicious mocktail. We discuss scientific papers found in well-renowned research journals, always relevant to the cases seen on the Sunshine Coast. Then, the discussion begins.

Attendees ask clarifying questions, inquire about different aspects of the experimental design, critique the methods, and bring a healthy amount of skepticism (or praise) to the results. The ideas found and discussed at the journal club can help expand and balance each vet scientist’s scope of what is happening in the world of research while informing experimental plans and clinical decisions. Sound good? Don’t be shy – request the annual events calendar and we’ll see you soon.