Andrew J. Vallely is an Infectious Disease Specialist based on High St in Kensington, NSW 2052. He works with people who need clear, careful help with infections, especially when symptoms are ongoing, spread has happened, or the next steps feel confusing.
In many cases, his work covers sexually transmitted infections. That can include chlamydia, gonorrhoea, syphilis, trichomoniasis, and genital herpes. He also looks after people with HIV/AIDS, and he helps with planning and follow-up when ongoing treatment matters. Human papillomavirus (HPV) is another common area, including HPV infection and related problems like cervical dysplasia and cervicitis.
Some patients come in with symptoms that can be hard to place, like persistent discharge, sore areas, unusual rashes, or infection that keeps coming back. Others may be referred after a test result, when a doctor needs support with the best way to treat and monitor the condition. Over time, infections can affect different parts of the body, so it helps to have someone who can look at the whole picture without rushing.
At times, people also need help with infections that are not always “everyday” in Australia. His focus includes travel-related and parasite-related illnesses such as malaria, giardia infection, ascariasis, hookworm infection, and helminthiasis. There are also conditions like angiostrongyliasis, which can show up after certain exposures. For newborns, he may also be involved when infections affect babies, including neonatal conjunctivitis and antenatal infection concerns linked to herpes virus.
Andrew’s approach is practical. He aims to make sure the right tests are done, that treatment options are explained in plain language, and that follow-up is arranged so things don’t linger. For cervical health issues, that means working alongside other local care to support appropriate management when cervical cancer risk or abnormal changes are being investigated.
He is based at High St, Kensington, and sees patients who want a steady, realistic plan for dealing with infections. While the details of specific past roles, education history, and clinical trials aren’t listed here, the work area is clear: infectious diseases, sexual health infections, cervical health concerns linked to HPV, and a wider range of less common infections.