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
Women recovering from breast cancer should get written prescriptions for exercise as part of their treatment, according to Mater breast care nurse Ash Mondolo.
Up to 40 per cent of women who have breast cancer surgery will develop lymphoedema, a painful condition caused by fluid retention from the removal of lymph nodes.
Rates of breast cancer amongst Australian women have risen by 50 per cent since the 1980s.
In 2019, 56-year-old Ipswich resident Terri Rosevear felt a lump in her breast and her heart sank. The previous year she had found a lump and, after a biopsy, it had ...
An Ipswich Grammar School student who lost a family member to breast cancer has made it his mission to help raise funds to support other women diagnosed with the disease.
Mackay women battling breast cancer are set to benefit from new technology purchased thanks to the Mater Foundation’s RACQ International Women’s Day Fun Run.