Sloane J. Madden is an eating disorder specialist based in Sydney, NSW, Australia. She works with people who are dealing with difficult patterns around food, weight, and body image, and who also need care for their physical health. This can feel overwhelming at times, especially when health and wellbeing are both affected.
In clinical practice, Sloane looks after people with anorexia and bulimia. She also supports those who may be dealing with malnutrition, which can come with a range of body changes and ongoing health risks. At times, her work also includes helping patients manage hypophosphatemia, a complication that can happen when the body is under strain from not getting enough nutrition.
Eating disorders don’t have one single cause. For many people, it’s a mix of stress, complex emotions, habits that have built up over time, and real physical effects. Sloane’s approach stays practical and grounded. The goal is to understand what’s been happening, make a clear plan, and help the person move forward step by step, rather than trying to fix everything at once.
In many cases, support needs to cover both the mind and the body. That might mean working through what’s driving the behaviour, and also being mindful of nutrition, energy levels, and medical safety. Sloane focuses on patient needs as they change, because symptoms can shift with time, stress, and life events.
While the available details don’t list specific years of experience, Sloane provides care within the eating disorder space. Patients may come for assessment, ongoing support, or help with managing physical health concerns that can go along with eating disorder illness.
Education and research details aren’t included in the information provided here. Clinical trial involvement also isn’t listed. If you want more detail about qualifications, training, or whether clinical trials are part of the work, it’s best to check directly with the practice.
Sydney patients can book support in the same city where Sloane is based. The care setting is designed for people who need steady, realistic guidance—especially when symptoms are affecting day to day life. Over time, the aim is to help patients feel safer, more stable, and more in control of their health.