Urology
We provide care for people with conditions of the bladder, kidney and prostate.
checkViewport(), 100)"> What we do
The Urology Unit provides inpatient and outpatient services for patients with bladder, kidney, pelvic and prostate disorders.
Procedures and services include:
- robot assisted prostatectomy
- robot assisted partial nephrectomy
- prostate brachytherapy
- percutaneous stone surgery
- major pelvic cancer surgery
- holmium enucleation of the prostate
- sacral Nerve Root Stimulation
- statewide Pelvic Mesh Clinic
- reconstructive urology – Transitional, Functional
- urodynamics – Video-urodynamics and non-video urodynamics
- state-wide Neuro-urology (spinal urology) Service
- endo-urology – Stone surgery, Botox injections.
checkViewport(), 100)"> Where to find us
Urology is located in Tower Block, Level 7A.
Urology Outpatients is located in Outpatients building, Ground Floor, Area 1.
checkViewport(), 100)"> Who we are
The Urology unit is made up of urological surgeons, registrars and residents, specialist urology nurses, administrative staff and additional specialists.
Consultants
- Dr Rick Catterwell – Head of Unit
This page was last updated 9 April 2025.
You need a referral from a GP or medical practitioner to access this service.
Once your referral has been received it will be triaged according to clinical urgency.
If your referral is accepted, you will either:
- receive a letter, phone call or text message confirming your appointment time, date and location
- receive a letter confirming you have been waitlisted for an appointment.
If the referral is declined, your GP or referring medical practitioner will be notified.
Outpatient services
Find out information about specialist outpatient appointments, how to be referred, plus information when attending an outpatient clinic.
checkViewport(), 100)"> Your outpatient appointment
Contact us to:
- change your appointment time
- cancel your appointment
- find out triage status
- general outpatient enquiries.
If you need to cancel or change your appointment time, let us know as soon as possible.
Preparing for surgery
The healthier you are going into surgery, the stronger you will be coming out. Find tips and resources to help you get ready for surgery.
This page was last updated 9 April 2025.
We accept GP and specialist referrals to this service.
eReferrals and referrals via emails are preferred.
Use the Clinical Prioritisation Criteria (CPC) as a referral guide.
To ensure timely triage, include all demographic and clinical details.
The service triages referrals according to clinical urgency.
Urgent and serious referrals
If you are concerned about the appointment being delayed or if the patient's condition is deteriorating, contact the registrar to discuss.
Registrars are on call 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
Patients requiring immediate assessment should be sent directly to the Emergency Department.
Discharge guidelines
Patients whose medical condition has stabilised or resolved, and where no further appointment has been made, will be formally discharged. If medical assessment is required again, a new referral should be made explaining the reason.
This page was last updated 9 April 2025.
This page was last updated 9 April 2025.
This page was last updated 9 April 2025.