Erin Cvejic is an Infectious Disease Specialist based in Sydney. She works out of the Edward Ford Building on Fisher Road in Sydney, NSW 2006.
Infectious disease can be wide and messy, and in many cases it overlaps with long-lasting symptoms that don’t always fit neatly into one label. Erin looks after people who are dealing with ongoing illness after infections, as well as people who need help when symptoms come in waves.
Her clinical focus includes conditions such as Long Haul COVID and COVID-19, including cases where the illness lingers. She also supports people with issues linked to infections like mononucleosis. At times, she helps with infections and related complications that can show up after other viral illnesses, including Togaviridae disease. In some situations, she may also assess more serious past infections such as Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS).
There’s also a big whole-body side to this work. Erin commonly supports patients with chronic conditions that often sit alongside infection history, including Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and Fibromyalgia. People may also present with a mix of tiredness, pain, flare-ups, and day-to-day disruption that needs careful, steady management.
Erin also cares for women’s health concerns where infection and inflammation can play a role. This includes conditions like endometritis, adenomyosis, ovarian cysts, polycystic ovary syndrome, and vulvovaginitis. For some patients, symptoms can be uncomfortable and stressful, so a calm approach matters.
Her work list also includes a few broader medical areas that can come up alongside acute illness. For example, she may support patients with Acute Coronary Syndrome when infection-related factors are part of the picture, and she may assess Adult Syndrome where symptoms overlap with infectious triggers. In other cases, she works with people who have Anal Cancer as part of their broader care needs, including when infection risk or inflammation is relevant.
In terms of experience and education, the specific details are not listed here. You can find those points in her professional records, which include her background and training information.
Research and clinical trials can also be part of infectious disease work, but no specific research projects or clinical trial details are shown here.