David L. Hare is a cardiologist based in Heidelberg, VIC. He works out of Level 7, Lance Townsend Building, Studley Road, Heidelberg, VIC 3084, Australia.
Heart problems can look different from person to person, so David takes a practical approach. He focuses on helping with issues like coronary heart disease and heart attacks, and he also looks after people who need care after heart bypass surgery. At times, patients are dealing with heart failure, including heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF), and David helps them work through treatment plans that fit real life.
Valves can also be part of the story. David provides cardiology care for conditions such as mitral valve problems, and he looks at symptoms, scan results, and day-to-day changes to work out what matters most. For some people, the concern is rhythm-related, including serious events like cardiac arrest and ventricular fibrillation, where quick, careful assessment is really important.
Many heart conditions are linked with things like high cholesterol, obesity, and type 2 diabetes. David helps connect those dots so patients can understand how risk factors affect the heart over time. He also supports people who have a strong family history of heart disease or inherited cholesterol issues, so they can make informed choices about prevention and ongoing care.
In many cases, patients come in after tests, or they’ve been referred because symptoms kept coming back. David’s role is to sort the information clearly and guide the next steps. He understands that this is a stressful time, and he aims to keep the conversation calm and grounded, without rushing people.
David is trained as a doctor and cardiologist, and his work involves both office-based care and the practical side of treatment decisions for heart disease. While specific education details aren’t listed here, the focus stays on safe, up-to-date care and steady follow-up.
Research and clinical trials details aren’t provided here. Still, he works with the care pathways used in Australian cardiology, and he keeps an eye on how treatment options and best practice evolve.