At Mullumbimby Comprehensive Health Centre, our dedicated skin clinic offers a range of services for skin cancer diagnosis and treatment. With advanced tools and purpose-built treatment rooms, the clinic is designed to provide comprehensive care for your skin health.
One of the key features of our clinic is the use of digital mole scanning technology, which captures and stores detailed images of your skin. This technology allows for ongoing monitoring, helping to identify changes over time that may require further attention. By observing these changes, our team can provide thorough management of your skin health.
Early recognition and accurate diagnosis of skin cancer play a vital role in treatment. Our clinic provides both nonsurgical and surgical treatment options, ranging from simple excisions to more complex reconstructive procedures. The approach at our skin clinic is focused on addressing skin cancer effectively, with the goal of reducing its impact on your overall health.
Make a booking with our skin cancer clinic in Mullumbimby by calling (02) 6684 1511. We also assist with women's health, men's health, family medicine, chronic disease management, travel vaccinations, QML pathology, osteopathy, naturopathy and nutrition, podiatry, exercise physiology, physiotherapy, psychology, mental health services and preventative health.
At Mullumbimby Comprehensive Health Centre, our skin clinic is supported by practitioners with a strong focus on skin cancer care.
Services include early detection, surgical removal of skin cancers and reconstructive procedures, addressing a wide range of skin health needs. The collaboration between a skin cancer practitioner and a plastic surgeon ensures that both the medical aspects of skin cancer and the aesthetic and functional outcomes of treatment are considered.
This model of care provides patients with access to thorough treatment options, supporting effective skin cancer management.
It is important to get your skin checked regularly by a qualified medical professional – at least once a year or every few months if you are at high-risk of skin cancer or have been diagnosed with skin cancer previously.
Routine self-examinations are also a good way to monitor your own skin in between skin checks, but should not be relied upon to catch every suspicious spot.
You are at risk of developing skin cancer if any of the following apply:
You have many moles.
There is a family history of skin cancer.
You have had excess UV exposure or sunburns.
You have fair skin or are over 40.
Melanomas can develop suddenly at any age. Australia has the highest rate of skin cancer in the world. Our doctors are highly experienced in the diagnosis and management of skin cancer.
Skin cancer can almost always be cured—if detected early.
Health funds and Medicare rebates are available when indicated.
A comprehensive skin check takes around 15 minutes.
No referral is needed to see a skin specialist.
History is taken by the doctor to determine your risk group for skin cancer and melanoma, followed by examining the entire skin in good light, with a closer look of some pigmented spots with a dermoscope, which magnifies the spots so they can be better diagnosed.
Touching skin spots also helps with diagnosis, to check it if they are firm or soft, for example.
Occasionally skin lesions might need to be photographed and followed up over several months.
A head-to-toe skin check with a qualified skin cancer doctor is the only way to know if you have a skin cancer.
You will be required to undress to your underwear. A gown can be provided for your comfort.
The doctor will examine your head, face, neck, body, legs, feet, toes, arms, hands and fingers.
Genital areas are not routinely examined; however, skin cancers can develop in any area of the body and you should inform the doctor about any suspicious spots under your underwear. The doctor will only check these areas if you request them to do so.
A dermatoscope (a special skin microscope) will be used to help make a decision regarding a suspicious skin lesion or mole.
Photographs if taken are stored in your medical record for comparison at a later skin check. You will be asked to sign a form regarding any other specific use of your photos. The release of your photos for a second medical opinion, teaching or any internet usage will not be released without your permission.
A suspicious skin lesion may require a biopsy. A biopsy is a sample of the skin taken as a small punch, a shave or an incision or excision.
It is important to get your skin checked regularly by a qualified medical professional – at least once a year or every few months if you are at high-risk of skin cancer or have been diagnosed with skin cancer previously. Routine self-examinations are also a good way to monitor your own skin in between skin checks, but should not be relied upon to catch every suspicious spot.
Exams are performed with the patient keeping their underwear on. Because some skin cancers like melanoma can develop where the sun does not reach, the patient might be asked to move underwear aside for a brief moment for examination of breasts or buttocks. This is done by the patient, and only if the patient is comfortable with it.
Most skin cancers can be dealt with inside the skin clinic. Our team has many years of surgical experience and most skin cancers are removed under local anaesthetic in our clinic, with good cosmetic results. Only under rare circumstances does a patient need to be referred.
Skin cancer in children is rare but melanoma can affect a child. If the child has many moles or there is a strong family history of melanoma or if a parent worries about a childs’ mole, then it is recommended to perform a skin check on the child.
ABN: 94 534 997 304
AGPAL Accredited Practice