Iryna B. Zablotska is an Infectious Disease Specialist based in Parramatta, NSW. You can find her at 162 Marsden Street, Parramatta, where she helps people deal with infections that need careful, ongoing care.
Infectious diseases can feel confusing and stressful, especially when symptoms come and go or tests take time to come back. Iryna’s role is to make the picture clearer, talk through what the results mean, and help people make practical plans for treatment and follow-up.
Her work commonly focuses on conditions like HIV/AIDS and viral hepatitis, including Hepatitis B. These are long-term conditions for many people, so appointments are often about more than just one test or one medicine. Treatment choices, monitoring, and lifestyle factors can all matter, and she looks at them in a calm, step-by-step way.
For HIV/AIDS care, the focus is usually on staying on effective treatment and keeping an eye on health over time. That can include checking blood results, managing side effects, and helping people understand what changes to watch for. In many cases, small adjustments make a big difference to comfort and stability.
For hepatitis, especially Hepatitis B, the aim is to support the liver and reduce flare-ups where possible. Viral hepatitis can vary from person to person, so care often looks at how the illness is behaving right now, what treatment options fit, and what follow-up is needed. She also helps people with the basics—like how testing works and why regular monitoring is important.
Iryna understands that health issues like these can affect work, relationships, and peace of mind. At times, people just need clear answers and a steady plan. Other times, they want help managing complex medication routines. Either way, the conversations stay plain and practical.
Because infectious disease care can change as new guidelines and treatment approaches come in, she keeps up with current information so decisions are based on what works best now. If a case needs extra input or coordinated care, she can also work alongside other health professionals involved in a person’s care.
Clinical trials: if someone is eligible for any relevant trials, the discussion can cover what that would mean in real terms for their situation. For some people, trial options are considered as part of the wider care plan, not as a quick detour.