John L. Oliffe is an Oncologist based in Grattan Street, Parkville, VIC 3010, Australia.
His work focuses on people dealing with serious, long-term health concerns. In many cases, that includes prostate cancer, including familial prostate cancer. He also looks after patients who have had or may need surgery such as a prostatectomy.
Alongside cancer care, he supports patients with other complex conditions. This can include blood clots, and also bleeding and blood-related conditions like Hemophilia A. He may also be involved in ongoing care for people living with HIV/AIDS.
Health issues don’t always sit neatly in one category, so care often includes day-to-day symptoms too. Erectile dysfunction (ED) is one example. At times, treatments for one problem can affect another, so managing overall health and quality of life matters.
There’s also a focus on infectious illness support, including COVID-19. For patients and families, that can mean practical advice and steady follow-up when things change.
Over time, oncology care can mean lots of appointments, careful monitoring, and making sense of results. John works with patients through that process and helps them understand what is happening, even when the situation feels overwhelming.
Experience is built from working with a mix of cancer-related and blood-related conditions. The profile does not list specific years or roles, but it does show a clear pattern of care across these areas, including prostate cancer treatment pathways and blood clot management.
Education details aren’t shown on this profile. What is listed is the clinical focus, including prostatectomy care, blood clots, Hemophilia A, and support for people with HIV/AIDS.
Research and publications are not described in a clear way here. Clinical trials are also not listed with details. If you’re looking for information about trial involvement or research output, that would need to be checked directly with the clinic.
If you want to discuss a specific condition, it helps to bring any recent reports and a list of current treatments. That way, appointments can get to the point faster and support can be tailored to what’s going on now.