Consultant ENT Surgeon & Laryngologist

Ms Winnie Yeung is a Consultant ENT Surgeon and Laryngologist at St George’s University Hospitals NHS Trust, with a specialist focus on voice disorders. She has particular expertise in treating laryngeal dystonia and complex neurological conditions of the head and neck using botulinum toxin. Ms Yeung leads both the multi-disciplinary Voice Clinic and the Neurolaryngology Clinic at St George’s. She also provides comprehensive ENT care for adults and children.

Ms Yeung earned a BSc from Imperial College London and graduated with Distinction from King’s College London Medical School, receiving the John Wignall Prize. During her ENT specialty training in the East Midlands, she served as Regional Trainee Lead for the NIHR Clinical Research Network and contributed to several national research studies, leading to numerous peer-reviewed scientific publications. Since 2021, she has been a Specialty Advisor in Otolaryngology for the Royal College of Surgeons’ Evidence Support Team.

Following her specialist registration with the GMC, Ms. Yeung completed the international Clinical Laryngology Fellowship at the University of Sydney, Australia. There, she gained advanced training in voice, swallowing, and airway disorders, including professional voice care. Her subspecialty interests include neurolaryngology, phonosurgery, and office-based laryngeal procedures.

Committed to education, she is an Honorary Senior Lecturer at St George’s, University of London, and teaches on the Royal College of Surgeons’ Basic Surgical Skills course.

Clinical interests

  • Voice disorders, including care for professional voice  users
  • Swallowing and airway disorders
  • Neurolaryngology, including laryngeal dystonia

Multidisciplinary management of complex neurological disorders affecting the head and neck (Meige syndrome, palatal myoclonus, cervical dystonia, anterocollis posture and vocal fold motion impairment in multiple system atrophy)

Further information

For a reliable and trusted information resource on voice, airway, and swallowing disorders, please visit: www.sevas.co.uk