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
Throughout her career as a nurse and clinical midwife, Tess Harmey has remained committed to lifelong learning and providing compassionate care to mothers and babies ...
A first-time Lockyer Valley mum has told how her maternity photoshoot turned into a surprise marriage proposal just days before her premature baby boy was born at ...
Pregnant women trying to stay healthy for their babies are relying too heavily on multivitamins instead of good food in their second trimesters, according to a new ...
Three doctors—two obstetricians and one medical officer—at the Centre for Maternal Fetal Medicine (MFM) at Mater Mothers’ Hospital have embarked on PhD journeys ...
A joint Mater Research and Mater Mothers’ Hospital has redesigned the Gestational Diabetes Mellitus (GDM).
A new hysterectomy procedure that leaves no scars and causes little pain has been performed at Mater Private Hospital Springfield for the first time.
Meet little Abigail Heise – the newest Brisbane Broncos fan to join the ranks in 2024. The youngest of seven siblings, Abigail was the first baby born at Mater ...
One of the tiniest Mater Mothers babies of 2023 will be reunited with his twin brother on Christmas Day in the hospital’s Neonatal Critical Care Unit.
A young couple have celebrated their wedding next to the cot of their precious baby daughter in a neonatal unit.
When Charlotte was born via an emergency caesarean at Mater Mothers’ Private Brisbane she was 15 weeks premature, unable to breathe and barely the size of a mango.
The life of a tiny baby born two months early with a potentially deadly heart defect has been saved thanks to doctors at four major Queensland hospitals.
Fifty new Queenslanders have been welcomed to the world in one of the busiest-ever 24 hours at Mater Mothers’ hospitals.