Chiropractic practice background

Dr. Mark Hastie

80 Highett St, Richmond VIC 3121, Australia, VIC

5.0 (2 reviews)
Dr. Mark Hastie - Photo 1
Dr. Mark Hastie
Dr. Mark Hastie - Photo 2
Dr. Mark Hastie
Dr. Mark Hastie - Photo 3
Dr. Mark Hastie

About Dr. Mark Hastie

The user wants an "About" article for an Australian chiropractic clinic named "Dr. Mark Hastie" located at 80 Highett St, Richmond VIC 3121.

Key constraints: 1. 200-350 words in 3-4 paragraphs 2. Professional, informative tone (directory listing style) 3. ONLY state facts provided - do not invent or assume anything 4. YMYL COMPLIANCE: No health claims, promises, "will fix", "will cure", "can treat". Use factual language like "the practice offers treatment for...", "the team has experience working with patients presenting with...", "services include..." 5. Mention practitioners by name and credentials/experience where provided 6. Mention specific techniques offered (if provided - but looking at data, no techniques are listed) 7. Include payment/pricing information naturally if available (not provided) 8. No heading/title - just body paragraphs 9. No bullet points or lists - flowing prose 10. No disclaimers or meta-commentary 11. Australian English (practise, specialise, organisation)

Data provided: - Clinic name: Dr. Mark Hastie - Address: 80 Highett St, Richmond VIC 3121 - Practitioners: Dr. Mark Hastie - Conditions treated: Not available (no website) - Availability: Not available (no website) - Online Booking: Unknown - Special features: No website available; practice details limited to Google Maps listing

Challenges: - Very limited information available. The prompt explicitly states "No website available; practice details limited to Google Maps listing" - I cannot invent techniques, conditions treated, pricing, availability, credentials beyond "Dr. Mark Hastie", or any other details. - I must write 200-350 words but have almost no facts to work with.

Strategy: Since I cannot invent facts, I must write carefully about what is known while maintaining the professional directory tone, and potentially noting the limited publicly available information without making it sound like a negative critique. However, I need to be careful not to violate the "ONLY state facts" rule by speculating.

Wait, looking at the data again: - The clinic is named "Dr. Mark Hastie" - Address is provided - Practitioner is Dr. Mark Hastie - Everything else is "Not available" or "Unknown" or "No website available"

So the only facts I have are: 1. The practice is called Dr. Mark Hastie 2. It's located at 80 Highett St, Richmond VIC 3121 3. The practitioner is Dr. Mark Hastie 4. No website is available 5. Details are limited to Google Maps listing

How to write 200-350 words with so little information? I need to expand on the location (Richmond, VIC), the fact that it is a chiropractic clinic (implied by the context of the request), and the practitioner name, while explicitly acknowledging the limited information available without being negative.

However, I must be careful: the user said "ONLY state facts provided in the data below." So I cannot add external knowledge about Richmond VIC 3121 (like "located in the heart of Richmond" might be okay as a geographical descriptor, but "vibrant suburb" might be adding opinion).

Actually, stating it's in Richmond VIC 3121 is a fact. Describing Richmond might be going beyond the provided data unless I stick to purely geographical/administrative facts.

But I have to write 200-350 words. With only 3 facts (name, address, practitioner name), this is extremely challenging.

Let me reconsider the requirements. The user says "ONLY state facts provided in the data below." This is a strict constraint. I cannot say "Dr. Mark Hastie is a chiropractor" because the data provided doesn't explicitly state his profession, only that it's an "Australian chiropractic clinic" in the preamble. Wait, the preamble says "Write a unique 'About' article for the following Australian chiropractic clinic." So I know it's a chiropractic clinic. The data lists "Conditions treated" (though not available) which implies it's a medical practice.

So facts I can use: - It is an Australian chiropractic clinic - Clinic name: Dr. Mark Hastie - Address: 80 Highett St, Richmond VIC 3121 - Practitioner: Dr. Mark Hastie - No website is available - Details are limited to Google Maps listing - Conditions treated: not available - Availability: not available - Online booking: unknown

I need to craft 200-350 words stating essentially that information is limited, but doing so professionally.

Possible approach: Paragraph 1: Introduction stating the practice name and location. Paragraph 2: Information about the practitioner (just the name, since no credentials/experience provided). Paragraph 3: Note about limited public information regarding services, techniques, and booking. Paragraph 4: Location/accessibility details based on the address provided.

Wait, I need to check: Can I mention that it's a chiropractic clinic? The preamble says "Write a unique 'About' article for the following Australian chiropractic clinic." This establishes the context. The data itself doesn't explicitly say "this is a chiropractic clinic" but the "Conditions treated" field implies healthcare, and the request context confirms it. I should probably identify it as a chiropractic practice based on the instruction context.

Structure: Para 1: Dr. Mark Hastie operates a chiropractic clinic located at 80 Highett Street, Richmond, Victoria 3121. The practice operates under the practitioner's name, reflecting the personal nature of the care provided at this Richmond location.

Para 2: The principal practitioner at the clinic is Dr. Mark Hastie. At present, detailed biographical information, professional credentials, and specific areas of clinical interest for Dr. Hastie are not publicly available through the practice's limited online presence.

Para 3: Information regarding the specific chiropractic techniques employed at the practice, the range of conditions addressed, and the treatment approaches offered are currently unavailable as the clinic does not maintain a dedicated website. Similarly, details concerning consultation fees, available appointment times, and whether online booking facilities are provided remain unspecified in publicly accessible directories, with practice details restricted primarily to basic listing information on Google Maps.

Para 4: Prospective patients seeking to engage with the services offered by Dr. Mark Hastie may locate the practice at the Richmond address provided. Given the limited public information currently available, direct enquiry at the clinic premises may be necessary to ascertain specific service details, practitioner availability, and appointment procedures.

Word count check: Para 1: ~35 words Para 2: ~32 words Para 3: ~65 words Para 4: ~38 words Total: ~170 words. Too short. Need 200-350.

I need to expand while staying factual.

Revised approach: I need to be more descriptive about what is NOT available, and perhaps elaborate on the location fact (Richmond VIC 3121) without adding external info.

Actually, looking at the "Special features" data: "No website available; practice details limited to Google Maps listing" - I can expand on this significantly while staying factual.

Let me try again:

Dr. Mark Hastie operates a chiropractic clinic situated at 80 Highett Street, Richmond, Victoria 3121. The practice is identified under the practitioner's professional name, establishing its presence within the Richmond metropolitan area. As a healthcare provider operating from this location, the clinic serves the local community, though comprehensive details regarding its operational structure and service scope remain limited in publicly accessible channels.

The clinic is led by Dr. Mark Hastie, who serves as the primary practitioner. Currently, specific information regarding Dr. Hastie's professional credentials, educational background, years of clinical experience, or particular areas of specialisation within the chiropractic field are not documented in available public listings. The practice maintains a minimal digital footprint, which restricts the availability of detailed practitioner biographical information for prospective patients seeking to understand the professional background of the treating clinician.

Regarding clinical services, specific details about the chiropractic techniques utilised at the practice, the particular patient demographics served, or the range of musculoskeletal conditions that the clinic addresses are not specified in available directories. The practice does not maintain an independent website, and consequently, information concerning consultation fees, treatment protocols, available appointment times, and whether the clinic offers online booking capabilities remains unspecified. Current records indicate that practice details are confined primarily to basic listing information available through Google Maps, without supplementary digital resources to provide further operational specifics.

Individuals interested in accessing chiropractic care at this Richmond location may visit the practice at 80 Highett Street. Given the limited publicly available information regarding services, practitioner availability, and administrative procedures, prospective patients may need to contact the clinic directly to obtain details regarding appointment scheduling, accepted payment methods, and specific treatment offerings available at Dr. Mark Hastie's practice.

Word count check: Para 1: ~65 words Para 2: ~65 words Para 3: ~105 words Para 4: ~60 words Total: ~295 words. This fits the 200-350 range.

Check constraints: - 3-4 paragraphs? Yes (4 paragraphs). - Professional, informative tone? Yes. - ONLY state facts provided? Yes, everything is derived from the provided data or the context (that it's a chiropractic clinic). I haven't invented techniques, conditions, credentials, or availability. - YMYL COMPLIANCE: No "will cure", "can treat" claims. I used "range of musculoskeletal conditions that the clinic addresses are not specified" - this is stating the lack of information, not claiming they treat it. I said "chiropractic care" which is the type of clinic it is per the instructions. I said "healthcare provider" which is safe. I said "serves the local community" - is this assuming too much? Maybe. Let me check. Actually, saying it "serves the local community" might be an assumption. Better to say "is located within" or "operates from". - Mention practitioners by name? Yes, Dr. Mark Hastie mentioned multiple times. - Credentials/experience? Stated that they are not available/not documented. This is factually accurate per the data. - Specific techniques? Stated they are not specified. Factually accurate. - Payment/pricing? Mentioned that information remains unspecified. Factually accurate. - No heading/title? Correct. - No bullet points? Correct, flowing prose. - No disclaimers? I should check if "Given the limited publicly available information..." counts as a disclaimer. It's more of a statement of fact about the information limitation. A disclaimer would be "This information may not be accurate" or "Please consult a doctor." The instruction says "Do not include any disclaimers or meta-commentary." My text doesn't have "This article is for informational purposes only" type disclaimers. It states facts about data availability. - Australian English: - "practise" (verb) vs "practice" (noun). I used "practice" as noun (the clinic, the practice). I used "practitioner". I should check if I need the verb form. "The clinic is led by..." not "practises". Actually, "operates" is fine. "Specialisation" with an 's' - yes used that. - "specialisation" - yes, used. - "behaviour" - not used. - "programme" - not used. - "centre" - not used but would be 're' not 'er'. - Check: "utilised" (British spelling) vs "utilized". Yes. - "favour" vs "favor" - not used. Wait: "specialisation" - I used "specialisation" in paragraph 2. Good. "practise" vs "practice": - "operates a chiropractic clinic" - good. - "The practice is identified" - good (noun). - "The practice maintains" - good (noun). - "at Dr. Mark Hastie's practice" - good (noun). I didn't use the verb "practise" (e.g., "Dr. Hastie practises in Richmond"). If I did, it would be 'practise' not 'practice'. But I used noun forms only, which are all 'practice' in both US and UK English actually? Wait: - US: practice (noun and verb) - UK: practice (noun), practise (verb) So my usage of "practice" as noun is correct for Australian English.

Check for invented details: - "Richmond metropolitan area" - is Richmond a metropolitan area? It's a suburb of Melbourne. Saying "metropolitan area" might be slightly grandiose but Richmond is indeed part of the Melbourne metro area. However, to be safe, "Richmond, Victoria" or "the Richmond area" is better. - "serves the local community" - assumption. Better to remove. - "patient demographics" - mentioned as unknown/unspecified, so that's fine. - "musculoskeletal conditions" - is this assuming too much? Chiropractic generally deals with musculoskeletal, but to be ultra-safe per "ONLY state facts provided", I should not assume what chiropractic treats, even if general knowledge. The prompt says it's a "chiropractic clinic" so I can use that term, but I should be careful about elaborating on what that entails unless specified. However, stating that details about conditions treated are unavailable is factual.

Revised text to remove assumptions:

Dr. Mark Hastie operates a chiropractic clinic situated at 80 Highett Street, Richmond, Victoria 3121. The practice is identified under the practitioner's professional name, establishing its presence within this inner-Melbourne suburb. Located on Highett Street, the clinic operates from this dedicated address, offering chiropractic services to individuals seeking care in the Richmond area.

The clinic is led by Dr. Mark Hastie, who serves as the primary practitioner. Currently, specific information regarding Dr. Hastie's professional credentials, educational background, years of clinical experience, or particular areas of specialisation within the chiropractic field are not documented in available public listings. The practice maintains a minimal digital footprint, which restricts the availability of detailed practitioner biographical information for prospective patients seeking to understand the professional background of the treating clinician.

Regarding clinical services, specific details about the chiropractic techniques utilised at the practice, the particular patient presentations addressed, or the range of conditions that the clinic offers treatment for are not specified in available directories. The practice does not maintain an independent website, and consequently, information concerning consultation fees, treatment protocols, available appointment times, and whether the clinic offers online booking capabilities remains unspecified. Current records indicate that practice details are confined primarily to basic listing information available through Google Maps, without supplementary digital resources to provide further operational specifics.

Individuals interested in accessing care at this Richmond location may visit the practice at 80 Highett Street. Given the limited publicly available information regarding services, practitioner availability, and administrative procedures, prospective patients may need to contact the clinic directly to obtain details regarding appointment scheduling, accepted payment methods, and specific treatment offerings available at Dr. Mark Hastie's practice.

Check word count: Para 1: ~60 words Para 2: ~65 words Para 3: ~95 words Para 4: ~50 words Total: ~270 words. Good.

Check "inner-Melbourne suburb" - is this factual? Richmond is indeed an inner suburb of Melbourne. But is this provided in the data? No. The data only says "Richmond VIC 3121". I should not assume it's inner-Melbourne, even though it is factually true in reality, it's not in the provided data. I must remove this.

Correction: "establishing its presence within Richmond, Victoria."

Check "offering chiropractic services" - the prompt says it IS a chiropractic clinic, so this is safe.

Check "individuals seeking care" - slightly assumptive but general enough.

Check "patient presentations" - medical term for conditions patients show up with. This is acceptable and factual (not claiming treatment, just that details about what they see are not available).

Check "range of conditions that the clinic offers treatment for" - this uses the approved phrasing "offers treatment for" from the YMYL instructions.

Check "accessing care" - general term.

Check "treatment offerings" - factual.

Check "professional credentials" - the data says "credentials/experience where provided" - since not provided, stating they are not documented is correct.

Final check for Australian English: - "specialisation" - used, correct. - "utilised" - used, correct. - "behaviour" - not used. - "practise/practice" - used only as noun "practice", correct.

Final check for YMYL: - No "cure", "fix", "treat" (as a promise). - Used "offers treatment for" in the context of stating that these details are unknown. "the range of conditions that the clinic offers treatment for are not specified" - this is stating a lack of specification, not making a claim.

Actually, "offers treatment for" might be interpreted as a claim that they DO offer treatment for things, just that the range is unspecified. To be safer: "the range of conditions addressed by the clinic" or "the specific conditions for which the clinic provides care". Even safer: "the specific conditions managed by the clinic" - "managed" is a good neutral term.

Or: "details regarding the conditions for which the clinic provides treatment are not specified."

Let's go with: "details regarding the specific patient populations served or conditions addressed are not specified."

Final text:

Dr. Mark Hastie operates a chiropractic clinic situated at 80 Highett Street, Richmond, Victoria 3121. The practice is identified under the practitioner's professional name, establishing its presence within Richmond. Located on Highett Street, the clinic operates from this dedicated address, providing chiropractic services to the local area.

The clinic is led by Dr. Mark Hastie, who serves as the primary practitioner. Currently, specific information regarding Dr. Hastie's professional credentials, educational background, years of clinical experience, or particular areas of specialisation within the chiropractic field are not documented in available public listings. The practice maintains a minimal digital footprint, which restricts the availability of detailed practitioner biographical information for prospective patients seeking to understand the professional background of the treating clinician.

Regarding clinical services, specific details about the chiropractic techniques utilised at the practice, the particular patient populations served, or the conditions for which the clinic provides care are not specified in available directories. The practice does not maintain an independent website, and consequently, information concerning consultation fees, treatment protocols, available appointment times, and whether the clinic offers online booking capabilities remains unspecified. Current records indicate that practice details are confined primarily to basic listing information available through Google Maps, without supplementary digital resources to provide further operational specifics.

Individuals interested in accessing services at this Richmond location may visit the practice at 80 Highett Street. Given the limited publicly available information regarding services, practitioner availability, and administrative procedures, prospective patients may

Practitioners

Dr. Mark Hastie

Conditions Treated

  • Not available (no website)

Features & Amenities

  • Open Saturday

Opening Hours

Monday 9:00 AM – 7:00 PM
Tuesday 9:00 AM – 7:00 PM
Wednesday 9:00 AM – 7:00 PM
Thursday 9:00 AM – 7:00 PM
Friday 9:00 AM – 7:00 PM
Saturday 8:00 AM – 1:00 PM
Sunday Closed

* Hours may vary on public holidays. We recommend calling ahead to confirm.

Location

Pricing Information

Contact for pricing

Contact for pricing

Estimated per consultation

• Initial consultations may cost more

• Health fund rebates may apply

• Contact practice for exact fees

Practice Information

Google Rating

5.0 ★

Location

VIC

Profession

Chiropractor

Reviews

2 reviews

Your Visit

  • AHPRA registered
  • Initial consultation included
  • Treatment plan discussed
  • Private health rebates available

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Frequently Asked Questions

How do I book an appointment at Dr. Mark Hastie?

You can contact Dr. Mark Hastie directly by calling 0417 550 613. Contact details are listed on this page.

What conditions does Dr. Mark Hastie treat?

The practice treats Not available (no website). Book a consultation to discuss your specific condition.

Is Dr. Mark Hastie registered with AHPRA?

All chiropractors in Australia are required to hold current AHPRA registration to practise. You can verify any practitioner's registration at ahpra.gov.au.

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