Parkville travel health
Parkville Travel Health can accommodate a range of travellers, including travellers with complex underlying medical issues. Appointments are suitable for individuals travelling for a range of purposes including business, leisure, overseas aid work, volunteer work and overseas postings.
Specialists are available for consultation each Wednesday afternoon. See our team of rotating Infectious Diseases specialists and their special interests at the bottom of this page.
What to bring:
- Please bring a referral from your General Practitioner and your Medicare Card. If you do not have a GP referral, please let reception know at the time of booking so we can arrange a referral appointment for you.
- Your travel itinerary
- If you are not a patient of our GP practice: a current and accurate health summary
- Records of past vaccinations (such as a yellow book)
What to expect?
A pre-travel appointment generally involves a discussion of your general health and travel plans, vaccine-preventable diseases, preventing foodborne illness and managing traveller’s diarrhoea, preventing mosquito and insect-borne diseases including malaria, in addition to targeted travel advice (including non-infectious hazards). Our clinic has many travel-related vaccines available on site, supported by our clinic nurse who is able to administer vaccines after your consultation.
You should allow approximately 1 hour for your appointment. This includes a consultation, vaccine administration time and an observation period of 15-30 minutes post vaccination (depending on vaccines administered).
Consultations are privately billed and payment for vaccines is required on the day of consultation.
Yellow fever vaccination
Parkville Precinct Medical is accredited to provide yellow fever vaccination.
TICK BORNE ENCEPHALITIS (TBE) vaccination
PPM is experienced with providing the TBE vaccine. We require patients to book an appointment 3 months in advance of their departure date.
BCG vaccination
Parkville Precinct Medical does not offer the BCG vaccine.
Public-based clinics which offer BCG vaccine:
- The Royal Children’s Hospital (Parkville)
- Monash Medical Centre (Clayton) – GP referral required
Private clinics which offer BCG vaccine:
- Associate Professor Mike Starr
- Caulfield Family Medical Practice/The Travel Clinic
- Southgate Medical Centre
- Kids Travel Doc (The Children’s Private Medical Group)
Q fever vaccination
Parkville Precinct Medical does not offer Q fever vaccination.
The nearest Q fever vaccination provider is the University of Melbourne Health Service. The Australian Q Fever Register maintains a list of medical practitioners who provide Q fever testing and vaccination services.
Bios and Special Interests

Dr Stephen Muhi
BSc BMedSc MBBS MPHTM MClinEd PhD FACTM FFTM FRACP
Dr Muhi joins us in his capacity as an Infectious Disease Specialist and Fellow of the Faculty of Travel Medicine (ACTM). Dr Muhi has an impressive list of medical qualifications, Fellowships, educational, research and supervisory roles in his speciality area of Infectious Diseases. Dr Muhi successfully juggles his extensive list of Medical appointments while he continues to teach medical students and junior doctors as a medical educator for the University of Melbourne and as Senior Research Fellow at The University of Melbourne. Dr Muhi has recently co-chaired the the 8th ‘Southern Cross’ Australasian Travel and Tropical Medicine Conference, Steve also advises on various committees at the Royal Melbourne Hospital, the Australasian College of Tropical Medicine and the Australasian Society for Infectious Diseases.

Dr Maxwell Braddick
BSc MBBS MPH FRACP
Maxwell Braddick is an infectious diseases physician with an interest in public health and tropical medicine. He completed his medical studies at the University of Queensland (UQ) in 2015, earned a Masters of Public Health from UQ in 2017, and was admitted as a Fellow of the Royal Australasian College of Physicians in 2023. In addition to clinical appointments, Maxwell is a PhD candidate at the University of Melbourne with research focusing on emerging mosquito-borne diseases.

Dr Arvind Yerramilli
Arvind Yerramilli is an Infectious Diseases Physician with special interests in emerging infectious diseases, antimicrobial resistance, medical technologies and clinical trials. He completed a Bachelor of Science (BSc) in 2012 and Doctor of Medicine (MD) in 2016, both at the University of Melbourne. He subsequently trained at a number of different hospitals in urban, regional and remote settings including rural Victoria and Central Australia. He was admitted as a Fellow of the Royal Australasian College of Physicians (FRACP) in 2025 and continues clinical work in Infectious Diseases. He is also currently undertaking a PhD at the University of Melbourne and is a recipient of a 2025 NHMRC Postgraduate Scholarship for his studies.

Dr JANET PASRICHA
Dr Janet Pasricha is based at the Victorian Infectious Diseases Service (VIDS), Royal Melbourne Hospital and the Doherty Institute, Parkville.
Janet is an Infectious Diseases Physician completing a PhD in Tuberculosis (TB) immunology which she undertook in Oxford, United Kingdom. Janet has an interest in global and refugee health.
booking an appointment
Bookings can be made at any time, by clicking the link below. Alternatively phone the clinic/practice on
03 8652 8652 during opening hours.
Monday – Friday: 8:30am – 5:00pm
Closed weekends and public holidays.
Phone
Location
1F Royal Parade
Parkville VIC 3052
We are located at street level, Royal Parade entrance, Melbourne Private Hospital Building
Clinic Hours
MON - FRI: 8:30AM - 5:00PM
Closed on weekends and public holidays
Acknowledgement of Country
Parkville Precinct Medical respectfully acknowledges the Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung peoples as the Traditional owners of the land in which we work. PPM extends respect to the people of the Kulin nation and all Elders past, present and emerging. We recognise those whose ongoing efforts to protect and promote First Nations cultures will leave a lasting legacy for future Elders and leaders.
We recognise that sovereignty was never ceded.
