An Adelaide woman has been identified as one of at least 40 people injured in the London terror attack.
Patricia Neis-Beer, who is a German national and permanent South Australian resident, was hit after a car deliberately ploughed through pedestrians on London’s Westminster Bridge yesterday.
Ms Neis-Beer had recently flown over to the UK to visit her daughter, a recent Facebook post revealed.
"The travel bug has beckoned and I am travelling around England and Europe to visit my daughter and family," she wrote.
Ms Neis-Beer is receiving treatment for an injured foot in an undisclosed hospital.
“She’s fine…I think…we haven’t heard from her,” Ms Neis-Beer’s mother, Evelyn Neis-Conrad, told 9NEWS this evening.
“As long as she comes home safe.”
Read more: Seven arrested, six homes raided after Westminster rampage
The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade is providing consular assistance to Ms Neis-Beer.
She works at The Organic Market and Café in the Adelaide Hills, according to her Facebook page.
Earlier, Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull condemned the attacks which killed four people and at least 40 others injured.
"We will never let the terrorists win. Not on the battlefield, not here at home, we will never change the way we live,” he told parliament.
Opposition Leader Bill Shorten told parliament Labor shared the government's commitment to security.
"We say to those who seek to spread fear, who shed blood to spread fear, you will not succeed," Mr Shorten said.
"You will not divide a people or a world determined and too strong to defeat your ideology of evil."