Dr Matty Lee is a Kew-based allied health clinician offering acupuncture, Chinese herbal medicine, and osteopathic care. The clinic is at 1/3 Wellington Street, Kew VIC 3101, and it’s set up for people who want a steady, practical approach to feeling better.
He works with adults and often helps people managing day-to-day pain and tightness. That can include aches from everyday wear and tear, sore backs and necks, muscle stiffness, and other discomforts that build up over time. At times, clients also come in when they’re looking for support with sleep, stress, and general recovery, especially when symptoms keep coming back.
Dr Lee’s style is a mix of hands-on treatment and education. With osteopathic manipulation, he focuses on gentle movement and careful physical work to help the body feel more balanced. For acupuncture, he uses needle techniques to support comfort and movement, and he aims to keep sessions calm and clear from start to finish. Alongside this, he can offer herbal medicine consultation and nutritional counselling, when it suits the person’s needs.
In many cases, the goal is not just quick relief. It’s about helping you understand what might be driving symptoms, and what changes can make a difference between visits. Over time, that may mean looking at posture, activity, stress load, and everyday habits, not only the one-off flare-up.
Dr Lee brings together three different areas of care: acupuncture, Chinese herbal medicine, and osteopathy. This can be useful when your symptoms don’t feel simple or when one approach alone hasn’t fully helped. Care plans are usually shaped around what’s going on for you right now, what you’re comfortable with, and what you’re able to do day to day.
Clinical experience is built through regular work in practice, with attention to safety, comfort, and making sure treatment makes sense for each person. Training covers the basics needed to work across acupuncture, herbal medicine, and osteopathic techniques, so services can be coordinated in a way that feels grounded.
Language support is also available. Dr Lee speaks English and Chinese (Mandarin), which can help if you prefer clearer explanations in your own language.
There aren’t any public details listed about clinical trials or specific research papers. Still, the focus stays on well used, practical methods and ongoing care that fits into real life.