Useful Management Information

Internal referrals only. The scar clinic provides Occupational Therapy services for children within the GCUH Burns Clinic who are at risk of scarring following a burn injury. For patients with burns that take more than 17 days to heal and require scar management, they should be referred at the time of healing unless requiring intervention during the wound healing phase (eg splinting, oedema management, psychosocial support etc). Patients are assessed and offered appropriate management options to minimse the risk of scarring and impact on occupational performance. These may include silicone products, moisturiser, splinting, compression, massage, scar desensitization and education.

The Occupational Therapy scar clinic runs alongside the burns dressing clinic on a Wednesday afternoon from 1-4pm. Adhoc referrals received in clinic will need a retrospective internal referral completed the day they are referred so they can be booked retrospectively.

Minimum Referral Criteria

Does your patient meet the minimum referral criteria?
Category 1 (appointment within 30 calendar days)
  • Post skin-graft where the scar is across a joint and requires splinting to immoblise.
  • Oedema management during wound healing phase
  • Burns that have healed within 17 days but have signs of early scar formation, identified risk factors or a history of poor scar outcomes.
  • At risk of scarring on an area that crosses a joint
  • Early signs of scar thickening at time of healing
  • Burns that required surgical intervention eg skin graft, wound closure, biodegradable temporizing matrix (BTM).
  • Children who are unable to participate in burn cares and outcomes are likely to be compromised, may be suitable for psychosocial support.
Category 2 (appointment within 90 calendar days)
  • No category 2 criteria
Category 3 (appointment within 365 calendar days )
  • No category 3 criteria

If your patient does not meet the minimum referral criteria

  • Assessment and management information may be found on a range of conditions at HealthPathways
  • If the patient does not meet the criteria for referral but the referring practitioner believes the patient requires specialist review, a clinical override may be requested:
    • Please explain why (e.g. warning signs or symptoms, clinical modifiers, uncertain about diagnosis, etc.)
  • Please note that your referral may not be accepted or may be redirected to another service

Essential Referral Information

  • Reason for referral
  • Length of time to heal
  • Date and mechanism of injury

Additional Referral Information

  • Any known risk factors eg infection, dark skin tone, history of poor scar outcomes etc
  • Surgery details if relevant eg skin graft, wound closure
  • Any psychosocial or developmental considerations
Last updated 23 October 2025

Send Referrals To

Smart Referrals

Preferred Method
About Smart Referrals

Secure Web Transfer

Send to: Paediatric Occupational Therapy

MO Account: GQ4215000TL

HL EDI: qldcomch

Internal Referrals

Occupational Therapy - Paediatric qhRefer

Fax

Not available

Post

Gold Coast University Hospital
1 Hospital Boulevard
Southport QLD 4215

Enquiries

Not available

Related HealthPathways

No directly related pathways found

Service Availability

Mr Scott Plumbridge
Director of Occupational Therapy

Facilities

Gold Coast University Hospital

If you would like to send a named referral, please address it to the specialist listed above, who will allocate a suitably qualified specialist to see the patient. Alternatively, you can view a full list of our specialists.

Child Safety

If you have a reason to suspect a child in Queensland is experiencing harm, or is at risk of experiencing harm, contact Department of Children, Youth Justice and Multicultural Services . Please consider if mandatory reporting applies.

Gold Coast Health - For Clinicians
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