About Dr Amy Tang
Dr Amy Tang is a Brisbane-based female Gynaecologist and Certified Gynaecological Oncologist specialising in the management of both invasive and pre-invasive diseases of the female genital tract. Dr Tang uses the latest, evidence-based, clinically-proven techniques in the surgical treatment of women with ovarian cancer, cervical cancer, endometrial cancer, vulval cancer, and vaginal cancer to ensure the best outcomes for her patients.
Whenever possible, Dr Amy Tang uses the most up-to-date techniques in laparoscopic (keyhole) surgery in order to achieve the best possible outcomes for her patients. Her patients experience a shorter hospital stay, a much shorter recovery time, and a better cosmetic result.
Dr Amy Tang is an expert colposcopist in Brisbane with full accreditation by the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (RANZCOG). Dr Tang has extensive experience in colposcopy. Prior to opening her private practice in Brisbane, she was a gynaecological oncology consultant staff specialist at the Royal Prince Alfred (RPA) Hospital in Sydney, where she was responsible for supervising and teaching junior gynaecologists in performing colposcopy. Dr Tang also currently works part time at the Royal Brisbane and Women’s Hospital as a specialist gynaecological oncology consultant.
Dr Amy Tang completed her medical degree at The University of Queensland in 1999. During her training years, she gained invaluable experience working in various hospitals in Queensland, as well as major teaching hospitals nationally and internationally, including Sydney, Perth and Hong Kong. In 2007, she was appointed Clinical Assistant Professor at the University of Hong Kong, working in the Gynaecological Oncology Unit of Queen Mary Hospital. She obtained extensive experience in this busy tertiary referral centre performing open, laparoscopic, and robotically assisted Gynaecological Oncology surgeries.
She is a sub-specialist Gynaecological Oncologist, as certified by the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (RANZCOG). She has publications in various respected peer-reviewed medical Journals, and has spoken at various national and international meetings on gynaecological oncology.
Dr Amy Tang has a passion for teaching, and she is a clinical teacher for medical students at The University of Queensland. She is a member of the Australian Society for Gynaecologic Oncologists, and a member of the Queensland Centre for Gynaecological Cancer.
Additionally, Dr Tang is trilingual; she is also fluent in Cantonese and Mandarin.