Noula Gibson is a paediatrician based at Kent St, Bentley, WA 6102, Australia.
She looks after children who need extra support, especially when there are movement and development concerns. In many cases, that means helping families manage long-term conditions like cerebral palsy and spastic diplegia (infantile type). Spasticity can affect how a child moves, sleeps, and copes with day-to-day routines, so care is often about making things easier and more comfortable over time.
Paediatric care can also be about pain and day-to-day symptoms. Chronic pain in children is taken seriously, and the goal is to understand what’s going on and help keep pain under control. At times, this can mean working closely with other health professionals to support the whole picture, not just one symptom.
Feeding and digestion issues are another part of care. Noula also helps with gastroesophageal reflux in infants. Reflux can be stressful for families, especially when it affects feeding, comfort, and sleep. Getting the basics right, like routine and symptom triggers, can make a real difference, even when the condition improves gradually.
Her work is set up for children who may need clear plans, steady follow-up, and practical advice that fits into real life at home. Families often want to know what to watch for, what helps, and what the next steps are. That’s the kind of conversation that guides the appointments.
Experience-wise, the focus here is on caring for children with the conditions listed above, including cerebral palsy, spasticity, chronic pain, and infant reflux. (Specific years of experience aren’t listed here.)
Education details, including degree and training, aren’t provided in the information available. If you’d like, your clinic can share her qualifications directly.
There’s also no research or clinical trials information listed here. If clinical trials are being considered for a child’s situation, your treating team can explain what’s available and whether it’s suitable.
Overall, Noula Gibson’s paediatric approach centres on support that feels grounded, calm, and useful—helping children and families manage symptoms and keep moving forward.