Zahra Tajbakhsh is an Ophthalmologist based in Crawley, WA, Australia. She looks after people who need help with their eyes, from day-to-day irritation to conditions that need longer follow-up.
In her clinic, she treats a range of eye problems. That includes conjunctivitis, often called “pink eye”, and allergic forms of conjunctivitis. At times, patients also come in with itchy, bumpy inner-lid problems such as giant papillary conjunctivitis, or eye irritation linked to vernal keratoconjunctivitis. She also manages issues like ocular hypertension (OHT) and glaucoma, where keeping eye pressure under control matters for long-term vision.
Zahra also helps with corneal and eye-surface conditions. Interstitial keratitis is one example, where the cornea can get inflamed. She can also assess and manage conditions that affect how well a child sees, including amblyopia (sometimes called “lazy eye”), plus vision changes linked to astigmatism.
Some patients need specific procedures as part of their care. Her service list includes trabeculectomy, which is a surgery used to help lower eye pressure in certain glaucoma cases. She also provides iridectomy, another eye procedure used in selected situations.
Over time, Zahra’s work brings together both comfort-focused care and medical treatment. In many cases, the goal is simple: reduce symptoms like redness, itch, gritty feeling, and light sensitivity, then protect sight as the condition settles. She pays attention to how the eye looks, how it’s behaving, and what might be triggering problems, especially when allergies are involved or symptoms keep coming back.
She has experience managing these common and not-so-common eye conditions, including allergic conjunctivitis and more complex issues like glaucoma and interstitial keratitis. Training is in ophthalmology, and her approach is practical and calm, with care plans tailored to what’s going on in each individual eye.
Research and clinical trials aren’t listed here, but Zahra’s clinic work stays grounded in real-world eye care and treatments used to manage the conditions above.
If you’re dealing with ongoing eye redness, eye pain, blurred vision, or suspected glaucoma or ocular hypertension, it’s worth getting checked early.