ReMed Natural Medicine Clinic

ReMed Natural Medicine Clinic ReMed is committed to finding a health solution that makes a difference and gives you lasting result Is it a food reaction? BUT it’s not normal. Don’t give up!

At ReMed, we know you want to be healthy and vibrant 🌟

Yet so many women are dragging themselves through life - maybe your energy levels just aren’t what they used to be - sluggish, bloated, flat or irritable…. These are many of the things we hear in clinic every single day
We understand what it is like. Knowing that something is not quite right, being told that there is ‘nothing wrong with you’ – is it hormones? Is it just because I am getting older? We know that there is a reason and have helped over 6,127 women get their spark back. There is an answer that can help you, and that is why we help women discover what is really going on so they can resolve it once and for all

Here’s how it works:
✔️ Book an assessment with our experienced team
✔️ Get a personalised plan to identify what is going on and how to resolve it
✔️ Implement the plan delivered in a step-by-step process
✔️ Feel amazing and tell all of your friends

🛑 You don’t have to keep dragging yourself through life, so book an assessment today and re-discover life as it is meant to be. https://remed.com.au/meet-the-team/

14/03/2026

Carolyn explains that while gut health is often blamed for many health issues, prolonged stress can be an important piece of the puzzle. Ongoing stress can disrupt the nervous system, raise cortisol, and impact the gut through the strong connection between the brain and digestive system.

Addressing stress and supporting the nervous system can be just as important as focusing on gut health itself.

Lasting improvements often come from looking at the bigger picture, not just one symptom.

Parents often say things like, “We thought we were finally on the right track,” and then a week later everything changes...
12/03/2026

Parents often say things like, “We thought we were finally on the right track,” and then a week later everything changes again.

It can feel confusing when symptoms improve for a while and then return. Not necessarily worse. Just different. And hard to explain.

On 20 March 2026, Dr Alessio Fasano will speak about barrier integrity and how changes in protective barriers may influence immune activity and inflammation in children with PANS.

His research on zonulin helped shape how clinicians understand intestinal permeability and its role in immune signalling. In this session, he will walk through what current research shows and why it matters for children whose symptoms seem to fluctuate.

For families trying to make sense of changes that do not follow a straight line, this session offers perspective grounded in research rather than guesswork.

📅 20 March 2026 | 8 to 9am AEDT
🔗 Register here
https://www.pansparentcollective.com/membership

Sometimes having a clearer explanation changes how those ups and downs are understood.

Are afternoons your toughest time of day?Many people notice they feel reasonably steady in the morning and then somethin...
10/03/2026

Are afternoons your toughest time of day?

Many people notice they feel reasonably steady in the morning and then something shifts in the afternoon. Focus drops, patience thins and there may be a low level anxiety or heaviness that was not there earlier.

It is often framed as a motivation issue. But the gut is usually part of that story.

How digestion handled breakfast and lunch matters. Whether blood sugar rose and fell too quickly matters. Whether the nervous system has been in a mild stress response while digesting also matters.

The gut and brain communicate constantly. When digestion has been working hard or struggling quietly, the brain often feels it later in the day.

If afternoons regularly feel harder than they should, it may be worth asking what the gut has been managing since the morning.

08/03/2026

Rebecca explains how evening habits can shape both sleep and digestion. When the body is calm at night, it helps regulate blood sugar, lower inflammation, and support deeper sleep. But late heavy meals, alcohol, screens, and stress can raise cortisol, disrupting sleep and triggering digestive issues like reflux or bloating.

Try finishing dinner 2–3 hours before bed and create a simple wind-down routine to help the body shift into rest mode.

Small changes at night can make a noticeable difference to how the body feels the next day.

06/03/2026

Have you ever noticed that when your stomach feels off, your mood does too?

Some people only start noticing this after it happens a few times.
On days when digestion feels uncomfortable or unsettled, mood often feels different as well. Patience might be lower. Small things feel more irritating than usual. Energy can feel heavier or harder to access.

It is easy to assume that shift is caused by stress or a busy schedule.

But the gut and nervous system are closely connected. When digestion is inflamed or under strain, it can influence stress tolerance and emotional regulation in ways that are subtle but real.

This is not about overthinking normal mood changes. It is about recognising patterns.

If mood tends to dip when digestion flares, that connection is worth exploring rather than dismissing.

Join us this February 27th  for a conversation that meets parents where they are.This is a space created for reflection,...
26/02/2026

Join us this February 27th for a conversation that meets parents where they are.

This is a space created for reflection, learning, and understanding, not urgency or promises.

Dr Kiki Chang will speak about what PANS care realistically looks like today, how clinicians balance emerging research with real-world limitations, and where families may see gradual change over time. The focus is on helping parents feel less isolated by understanding the broader landscape they’re navigating.

Sometimes support starts with knowing you’re not alone in the uncertainty.

🔗 https://www.pansparentcollective.com/membership

25/02/2026

Rebecca shares how a child’s gut health can affect focus, mood, and behavior. Poor digestion can impact nutrient absorption and brain function, while supporting the gut with balanced nutrition can help improve learning and emotional wellbeing.

Taking care of the gut is often a simple step with a big impact on overall wellbeing.

20/02/2026

Rebecca explains how the food we eat directly affects mood, focus, and energy. Missing key nutrients or having blood sugar spikes can lead to low mood, brain fog, or anxiety.

Even small, consistent changes to daily nutrition can make a big difference.

Parents often ask whether PANS care will ever feel more consistent.Whether there will be clearer pathways.Whether things...
18/02/2026

Parents often ask whether PANS care will ever feel more consistent.
Whether there will be clearer pathways.
Whether things will eventually make more sense.

On 27 February, psychiatrist Dr Kiki Chang will share his perspective on how PANS is currently understood, where care still falls short, and what developments may shape the future.

With decades of experience supporting children, teens, and families, Dr Chang brings a grounded view of what research can offer right now, what it can’t yet answer, and how families can hold both hope and realism at the same time.

📅 27 February | 12–1pm AEDT
🔗 Register through membership here:
https://www.pansparentcollective.com/membership

Some children go to bed early every night and still wake up tired. They might struggle with mornings, have big emotions,...
16/02/2026

Some children go to bed early every night and still wake up tired. They might struggle with mornings, have big emotions, or seem flat by mid-afternoon.

Sleep quantity isn’t the same as sleep quality. Restorative sleep is when the body and brain actually recover, and if that’s not happening, kids can look worn down even with “good” routines.

Noticing these signs can help shift the focus from bedtime battles to what’s affecting rest beneath the surface.

When a child struggles to concentrate, it’s easy to assume it’s an attention issue. But sometimes the problem isn’t focu...
14/02/2026

When a child struggles to concentrate, it’s easy to assume it’s an attention issue. But sometimes the problem isn’t focus at all. It’s exhaustion.

Mental fatigue can make kids seem distracted, slow, or “not listening,” especially later in the day. Their brain has simply run out of energy to keep processing information at the same pace.

Understanding this difference matters. A tired brain needs support and recovery, not more pressure to push through.

We are opening two practitioner roles in PANS & PANDAS, OCD and tics.This is not simply a clinic position. It’s an oppor...
13/02/2026

We are opening two practitioner roles in PANS & PANDAS, OCD and tics.

This is not simply a clinic position. It’s an opportunity to grow within a structured, evidence-informed model of care, with deep clinical mentorship and access to global leaders in the field.

You do not need prior PANS experience.

You do need:
• A genuine desire to work with children
• The capacity to support families through difficult seasons
• A commitment to clinical depth and growth

If this speaks to you, comment “PANS EOI” or send us a message.

Address

8/19 Enterprise Drive
Bundoora, VIC
3083

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 7pm
Tuesday 9am - 7pm
Wednesday 9am - 7pm
Thursday 9am - 7pm
Friday 9am - 7pm
Saturday 9am - 5pm

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Our Story

ReMed has been changing lives through natural medicine for over 10 years

Our founding director, Keonie Moore originally became a naturopath due to recurrent illness when her son was an infant. Having exhausted her options, she finally turned to natural medicine and she was so amazed with the results - it changed the course of her life!

Having been in clinic practice as a naturopath for the past 14 years, Keonie is booked out 3-4 months in advance and is a sought-after keynote presenter both nationally and internationally due to her focus on implementing evidence into practice. Keonie has been widely recognized for her contributions to naturopathy within Australia. Career highlights include:


  • Keynote speaker: 2nd International Endocrinology Conference, Chicago, USA in 2014 where she had the opportunity to present alongside deputy editor of British Medical Journal and delegates from National Institutes of Health and Mayo Clinic