Skip to content

Flu Vaccines Available

Influenza (flu) is a highly contagious viral infection that spreads easily from person to person through coughing,
sneezing and close contact.
Unlike a cold, symptoms such as fever, sore throat and muscle aches develop suddenly with flu and last about a
week. In some cases, severe illness and complications such as pneumonia and bronchitis can develop, which can
result in hospitalisation and even death. The flu can also make some existing medical conditions worse.
The flu virus can be especially dangerous for elderly people, pregnant women, Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander people and very young children, as well as for people with underlying medical conditions and some
chronic diseases.
Patients eligible for the funded influenza vaccine:
• All children aged between 6 months and < 5 years
• Everyone 65 years of age and over
• All pregnant women at any time during pregnancy
• Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children who are 6 months to <5years
• Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people aged 15 years and over
• Persons aged 6 months and older with medical conditions that are predisposed to severe
influenza and are eligible for funded influenza vaccination

Please call the surgery to book an appointment.

Giving Up Sugar – 6 Amazing Health Benefits

Icecream, soft drink, cake, biscuits and chocolate… many of us experience a great deal of pleasure when we indulge in a sugary treat. Unfortunately however, research has shown that some of us are not just indulging occasionally, but basing much of our diet on foods containing sugar, particularly refined sugars that contain fructose. Unlike other…

Read More...

Common Flu Symptoms And Treatment Options

Winter is almost upon us but it’s not just a warm and cosy period where you can enjoy fluffy doonas, woollen socks and steaming mugs of hot chocolate. It can also mean an annoying case of the sniffles, and unfortunately for many, a case of the dreaded flu. With the horror flu season experienced last…

Read More...

Common Meningococcal Disease Symptoms And Treatment Options

Although the national incidence of meningococcal disease in Australia has decreased since the introduction of the meningococcal C (MenC) vaccine to the National Immunisation Program (NIP) in 2003, since 2014, notifications of invasive meningococcal disease have actually increased, with numbers during 2017 the highest they’ve been since 2006. Meningococcal disease is deadly – it is…

Read More...
Scroll To Top