Meabh Cullinane is a Breast Specialist based in the heart of Melbourne at 215 Franklin St, VIC 3000. Her work is mainly about helping people when things feel uncomfortable, painful, or just not settling down. Over time, she sees patients who need clear guidance and practical care, whether the issue is related to the breast or a more general, ongoing infection problem.
In breast care, Meabh supports people with issues like breast infection and galactocoele. These can be stressful, especially when you are not sure what is causing symptoms or what to do next. She focuses on getting to the root of the problem, explaining what’s going on in plain language, and helping patients feel more in control.
Meabh also looks after conditions that involve yeast and fungal infections. That includes thrush, vaginal yeast infection, vulvovaginitis, and Candida infections of the skin. At times, she sees people dealing with recurring symptoms. Some patients also have Familial Chronic Mucocutaneous Candidiasis, where the pattern of infection can come back again and again and needs steady, well-planned management.
Another part of her care covers bowel health. She works with people who have bowel incontinence, and also with issues like hemorrhoids. These problems are more common than people think, but they can be embarrassing and hard to talk about. Meabh keeps things calm and down-to-earth, so patients can describe what’s happening without feeling judged.
What often matters most is the day-to-day impact. Symptoms can affect sleep, work, relationships, and confidence. In many cases, Meabh helps people work out what to do during flare-ups and what changes may help in between. She also helps patients understand when symptoms may need urgent attention, rather than waiting it out.
Details about education and years of experience aren’t listed here, but Meabh’s approach is consistent: listening closely, taking concerns seriously, and working through options in a way that feels manageable. If you have symptoms that keep returning, or you’re not sure what’s causing them, she can help you sort it out.
No specific clinical trials are listed for this service. Still, if research or new treatment options are relevant to a patient’s situation, that discussion can happen as part of care.