We are an iconic provider of hospital-based healthcare, striving to deliver an exceptional standard of care
We comprise several hospitals, health centres, a nationally accredited education provider and a world-class research institute
We are a nationally accredited, hospital-based Registered Training Organisation - the only one of its kind in Queensland
We are part of a collaborative research institute with The University of Queensland and founding partner of the Translational Research Institute
Health . Education . Research . Foundation
After feeling a large lump in her breast, Hannah Caldow, 31, looked down and prayed it was nothing sinister.
Tiffany Clayton has been named Catholic Health Australia’s Emerging Leader of the Year, after being nominated for her significant contributions to Mater at Home’s ...
Recognising the potential of precision medicine – developing treatments that were more efficacious and less toxic – led Mater Research Executive Director Professor ...
Mater Research is delighted to announce the appointment of Professor Cameron Turtle as a member of the Research Advisory Board (RAB).
Mater is at the forefront of a new national centre that aims to transform health care for Australians with intellectual disabilities.
Preserving high quality, equitable healthcare for communities worldwide is a global priority.
Being a mother to six boys, with one of her children born prematurely at 29 weeks, prompted Noongar woman Valerie Ah Chee to become a midwife at the age of 45.
Sister Carolina Maria Correla, a missionary from a small town in Timor-Leste, recently visited Mater and is taking home some important learnings around teamwork.
School bullies have driven a 50% surge in the number of desperate young people seeking help from a specialist mental health unit in the past year.
Researchers at Mater Hospital Brisbane are encouraging women with gynaecological cancers to donate to the state’s only live tissue biobank in a bid to improve patient ...
Mater doctors are warning that Australian women are turning a blind eye to breast cancer, with figures revealing that a staggering 50.4 per cent of eligible women are ...
From rural New South Wales to Brisbane, Julia Crookes, 26, never thought she would be leading a cardiovascular team.