Helen Skouteris is an Endocrinologist based at 553 St Kilda Road, Melbourne, VIC 3004, Australia.
Her clinic work focuses on hormone and metabolism-related health. In many cases, that means looking after people living with diabetes, including Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes. She also supports patients with gestational diabetes during pregnancy, and she helps families understand what can help with day-to-day health and longer-term risk.
Weight and insulin health are a big part of the picture too. Helen works with adults and children where obesity is affecting health and wellbeing. She also sees people with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) and ovarian cysts, along with related concerns like irregular cycles and hormone balance.
There are other conditions that often sit next to endocrine health. Her role may also include working through health changes after having a baby, including postpartum depression. At times, she can be involved in broader care for people dealing with dementia, where body and hormone changes can play a part in how someone feels and functions.
Helen also has an interest in infectious illness impacts and wider health outcomes. Her service list includes COVID-19 and severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS). She may support patients who are sorting out ongoing health questions after these illnesses, alongside the usual medical checks.
In infants, high blood pressure can be complex, and she works with cases like high blood pressure in infants as well. That means careful monitoring, clear explanations, and making a plan that fits the family’s situation.
Experience: ongoing clinical work is the key theme here, with a focus on practical, real-world endocrine care across a range of patient needs. Education: the specific training details aren’t listed on this profile. Research: no research focus is shown on this page. Clinical trials: no clinical trial involvement is listed here either.
Overall, Helen’s approach is steady and grounded. She looks at the bigger health picture, then narrows it down to what matters most right now, so patients can understand their options and take the next step with confidence.