Hannah M. Thomas is an Infectious Disease Specialist based in Mawson Lakes, Adelaide, SA 5095. She looks after people who need help when an infection is the main problem, or when it keeps coming back. In many cases, getting the right diagnosis early makes a big difference.
Hannah’s clinical work covers common skin and throat infections, as well as some infections that need a careful, ongoing plan. She sees patients with conditions like impetigo and scabies, and she also helps with Group A strep problems, including strep throat. At times, this can connect to wider issues such as rheumatic fever, where follow-up and treatment matter a lot.
Infectious diseases can feel confusing because symptoms can look similar. Hannah focuses on sorting out what’s actually going on, then choosing a practical path forward. That might mean supporting treatment for a current infection, checking for complications, and helping patients understand what to watch for next.
She also works with serious respiratory infections, including Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS). While these are not everyday infections, they are important to handle with care. Patients may need clear guidance, close monitoring, and a plan that fits their situation.
Hannah is based in Adelaide and her practice location in Mawson Lakes makes it easier for local families and patients across the area to access specialist care. She understands that infections can affect sleep, school, work, and family life, not just health.
Over time, infectious disease care often comes with more than one step. For example, skin infections like scabies may involve treating close contacts too, and strep-related illnesses may need ongoing follow-up. Hannah helps people make sense of those steps in plain language, so it feels less overwhelming.
Education and background details aren’t listed here, but the focus is clear: calm, accurate assessment and treatment planning for infections that matter. If a case is complex, she aims to keep things grounded and practical. There’s usually a lot to think about when infections spread or don’t settle, so clear next steps are key.
Clinical trials research details aren’t provided here. Still, Hannah’s work centres on care that’s used in real life, with an emphasis on good outcomes and patient safety.