Dimple S. Goel is a Paediatric Endocrinologist based in Perth, WA, Australia. In many cases, her work is about babies and kids who need extra help with hormones, growth, and health checks when they are very young.
Paediatric endocrine care can start even before a child is fully settled in. Dimple looks after families dealing with newborn and early life health issues, especially where hormone balance is part of the picture. Conditions like neonatal hypothyroidism and hypothyroidism are a big part of this kind of care, since thyroid levels can affect energy, growth, and development.
At times, endocrine problems overlap with other medical concerns. Dimple also supports children who have been born with complex needs, including premature infants and situations like cerebral hypoxia. These cases can be tough on families, and the focus is on steady, practical follow-up.
She also works with babies who may have breathing and feeding challenges linked to facial and airway conditions, such as micrognathia and Pierre Robin sequence. In real life, parents often want clear answers about what to watch for and how doctors decide on next steps. That is where careful review and ongoing monitoring matter.
Another area of care includes high blood pressure in infants and pulmonary hypertension. These conditions need close attention and a calm, organised approach, because they can change over time. Dimple’s role is to help bring the hormone and body system side of the story together with the wider treatment plan.
Some families also come in with bowel and feeding concerns, including Hirschsprung disease. While this isn’t always a hormone problem, endocrine assessment can still be useful when doctors are trying to understand the full health picture for a child.
Over time, Dimple has built experience caring for infants and children with a mix of growth and hormone related needs, as well as related health issues in early life. The aim is simple: help babies get the right checks, support families through the uncertainty, and keep care moving in the right direction.
She stays focused on what’s happening in the clinic day to day, and on making sure families understand the plan as clearly as possible.