Celia Godfrey is a neuropsychologist based on Flemington Road in Parkville, VIC 3052. She works with people who are dealing with changes in thinking, memory, behaviour, learning, and day-to-day functioning. Appointments can be for adults, and at times for younger people and families, depending on what’s going on.
Her clinic work often includes helping people after a concussion or a traumatic brain injury. This can mean trouble with attention, slower thinking, mood changes, sleep problems, or feeling mentally “off” even when the injury was some time ago. In many cases, she looks at how symptoms show up in daily life and what supports might help.
Celia also works with conditions that affect communication and language, including developmental dysphasia. When language and understanding don’t come as easily as you’d expect, it can impact school, work, and relationships. She focuses on practical ways to improve everyday communication and reduce the stress that often comes with these challenges.
Another area she works with is excessive daytime sleepiness. Sleepiness can be more than just feeling tired. It can affect safety, motivation, concentration, and how well someone can keep up at home or work. She helps people sort out what might be driving the problem and how to manage it step by step.
At times, her sessions also support people experiencing issues linked to antisocial personality disorder. This can involve long-running patterns of behaviour, anger, or conflict with others. The aim is usually to understand what’s happening underneath and to help work toward safer, more workable choices.
Celia’s training is in neuropsychology, with a focus on assessment and understanding how the brain affects thinking and behaviour. She uses structured, plain-language explanations, so people can actually understand the results and what they mean for everyday life. Over time, she keeps her approach up to date as new tools and methods are used in practice.
Research and clinical trials aren’t a main focus of her clinic from what’s publicly listed, but she stays grounded in current clinical approaches and uses what’s helpful for the person in front of her. The work is calm and steady, with an emphasis on practical next steps rather than big, complicated promises.
If you’re looking for support in Parkville, Celia Godfrey is available at her location on Flemington Road for neuropsychology appointments.