Aroney-Nicholas

Dr Nicholas Aroney

Structural Cardiologist; St Vincent’s Private Hospital Northside; Mater Public and Mater Private Hospitals, South Brisbane; Associate Lecturer, The University of Queensland
Dr Nicholas Aroney is a Queensland born, bred and educated Interventional and Structural Cardiologist. He achieved First Class Honours in his Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery from Griffith University in 2011. He achieved a Fellowship of the Royal College of Physicians in Adult Cardiology after appointments at the Royal Brisbane and Prince Charles Hospitals. Following this, he performed a two year coronary and structural fellowship at The Prince Charles Hospital. In 2020-21, Nick was the Structural Heart Fellow at St Thomas’ Hospital, London, United Kingdom, a worldwide centre of excellence in TAVI, adult structural and adult congenital heart procedures. Whilst at St Thomas’, Nick was involved with international trials and first-in-man procedures. Dr Aroney’s main interests are coronary and structural intervention, cardiac 3D modelling and 3D printing. He has published manuscripts and abstracts in peer-reviewed journals and presents regularly at national and international conferences. He performs coronary and structural interventions including; percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) and adult congenital interventions (PFO, ASD, PDA). Dr Aroney works from St Vincent’s Private Hospital Northside as well as Mater Public and Mater Private Hospital’s South Brisbane. He is a proud member of Heart of Australia, providing cardiac services to regional Queensland and is an associate lecturer for The University of Queensland.

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Upcoming Healthed Webcast

Alcohol Addiction Assessment and Advice

Tuesday 3rd March, 7pm - 9pm AEDT

Speaker

Dr Richard Bradlow

Psychiatrist and Addiction Specialist; Medical Director, Victoria Clinic, Melbourne; Austin Hospital

Over one in five Australian adults are regularly consuming alcohol at a quantity that is hazardous to their health. Join Dr Richard Bradlow for this presentation where he will discuss how to identify these patients in primary care, how the issue can be raised and how clinicians can change patients' drinking behaviour.