Waikato doctor takes up key Fiji role for leading eye care charity
21 July 2014
The Fred Hollows Foundation NZ today announces the appointment of a prominent Kiwi eye doctor to a key leadership role
in the Pacific. Dr Jim Stewart from Hamilton will begin work as the Director of the Pacific Eye Institute in Fiji in
early September. He will oversee The Foundation’s international training facility in Suva.
The Waikato ophthalmologist leaves behind his successful private practice to realise his long-term dream of working
again in the developing world.
“I’ve been keeping my ears open for something that was a bit more than just going up for a week and doing a lot of
cataract surgery,” says Dr Stewart. “This role has something more, a longer-term contribution.”
He’s hopeful that previous overseas experiences in Jerusalem have prepared him for work in the developing world.
“Issues I’m aware of that are real echoes of my time in Jerusalem are the challenges of maintaining adequate supplies of
drugs, the disposable items we need to do surgery and keeping operating theatres sterile,” he says. “Those are the
challenges of the developing world, but I think there are some really top-rate people who are conscientious and
concerned.”
Dr Stewart is building on a well-established culture at The Foundation’s Institute, which has over 30,000 visits from
patients each year. Since 2007, The Foundation has trained over 108 eye doctors and nurses at the facility. These
graduates are now working for their own governments in over 13 countries across the Pacific region.
Andrew Bell, Executive Director for The Foundation, notes Dr Stewart has the right mix of surgical expertise and
commitment to training young doctors.
“His skills as an ophthalmologist will enhance The Foundation’s ability to help more people see again in the Pacific,”
Bell says. “He’s also an experienced educator and mentor for registrars. That will help build the culture of knowledge
sharing and training local eye health professionals.”
Dr Stewart moves to Suva next month and says the response from his patients has been heart-warming.
“The thing that has really struck me has been the tremendous encouragement I’ve had from virtually every patient who’s
been aware of it,” Dr Stewart says. “Every consultation has been people telling me how highly they regard The Foundation
and how pleased they are that I’m making this change.”
Originally from Auckland, Dr Stewart studied medicine in Dunedin, the UK and the US before specialising in glaucoma and
putting down roots in the Waikato.
He’s cautious about any preconceived ideas he may bring to the role and has ruled out the possibility of an increased
role for New Zealand doctors at the Institute. Dr Stewart emphasises the importance of training locals as a key
motivation for himself and The Foundation.
“The whole point of the Institute is the training of Pacific doctors,” he says.
The Foundation is committed to realising Fred Hollow's vision of a world free from avoidable blindness. Training local
doctors and nurses to reach that goal is central to The Foundation’s work.
About The Fred Hollows Foundation NZ
The Fred Hollows Foundation carries on the work of a legendary New Zealander, the late Professor Fred Hollows. Fred was
an internationally acclaimed eye surgeon and social justice activist who championed the right of all people to high
quality and affordable eye care. The Fred Hollows Foundation shares Fred’s vision of a world where no one is needlessly
blind, and works to end avoidable blindness in 30 developing countries across Asia, Africa and the Pacific. In the last
five years alone, The Foundation has performed nearly one million sight-restoring operations and treatments, and trained
more than 38,000 local eye health specialists.
The Fred Hollows Foundation NZ works in the Pacific Islands, Papua New Guinea and Timor-Leste where 4 out of 5 people
who are blind don’t need to be; their condition is preventable or treatable. We restore sight to the needlessly blind
and train local eye health specialists to provide eye care services in their own communities. hollows.org.nz
ENDS