Kaikoura GPs receive rural health’s Peter Snow Award
Kaikoura GPs receive rural health’s Peter Snow Award
The 2017 Peter Snow Memorial Award has gone to Kaikoura GPs Dr Chris Henry and Dr Andrea Judd. The award was announced at a ceremony at the New Zealand Rural General Practice Network’s annual conference in Wellington on Friday evening, March 31. The pair were presented with the award by last year’s recipients Dr Ivan and Leonie Howie, both rural general practitioners on Great Barrier Island.
Drs Henry and Judd were nominated for their “Innovations to patient management under difficult circumstances”, following last year’s 7.8 magnitude Kaikoura earthquake (November 14, 12.02am).
In accepting the accolade, Dr Henry and Dr Judd, who are based at Kaikoura Health Care, paid tribute to the efforts of their wider team, as well as the various other community and emergency groups involved in the quake aftermath.
Dr Henry
was in Kaikoura on duty at the time the quake struck and Dr
Judd was in Christchurch when she heard the news.
“Once
I realised the extent of the quake I rang St John and said I
needed to get up there [to Kaikoura] in one of their
helicopters and they obliged. It was an unreal scene when I
arrived and something akin to a war zone,” she
said.
“The new Kaikoura medical facility is the health hub in Kaikoura and there was very much a focus on that facility to provide health care as well as a reasonable amount of the social support needed. There were daily and constant interactions between the district council, civil defence, St John, district nursing and teams from Canterbury,” said Dr Judd.
Dr Henry said the medical centre was the very first emergency base until it was devolved and even afterwards it remained a key centre. As an unintended consequence it was about the only internet provider in the town that survived, so it was also a hub for all the businesses, who gathered at the health facility.
“We already had a community based team who arrived right after the quake. Admin staff for example just came in and collated extremely helpful data. We didn’t ask anyone to come in they just turned up and got on with it in spite of the fact their own homes were in complete disarray,” said Dr Henry.
“The District Nursing team knew most of the vulnerable members of the community and within minutes were able to check on them and get them out if necessary. Without that much discussion we just split up and said ‘right, you cover that patch, I’ll cover this patch.’ You can’t do that if you don’t know the community well,” he said.
Dr Judd said the support from Canterbury
was phenomenal and very, very fast. They had been through it
and had this immediate understanding of what the
complexities were going to be.
The pair also acknowledged
the huge support from the network of rural doctors and
nurses. “We were so confident in these people’s skills
and they also practise medicine the same way we
do.”
About the award
The Peter Snow Memorial Award
was set up to honour the life and work of Dr Peter Snow who
passed away in March 2006. Dr Snow was a rural general
practitioner based in Tapanui.
As well as caring for his
patients, Peter was Past-President of the Royal New Zealand
College of General Practitioners and was a member of the
Otago Hospital Board and District Health Board. He was
enthusiastic and active in seeking knowledge to improve the
health and safety of rural communities. His work contributed
to the identification of the chronic fatigue syndrome and he
was influential in raising safety awareness on issues
related to farming accidents.
Previous winners include:
Inaugural winner Dr Ron Janes (2007)
Nurse Jean Ross
and Dr Pat Farry (2008 – jointly awarded)
Dr Garry
Nixon (2009)
Dr Tim Malloy (2010)
Dr Martin London
(2011)
Nurse Kirsty Murrell-McMillan (2012)
Dr Graeme
Fenton and NZIRH CE Robin Steed (2013)
Kim Gosman and Dr
Janne Bills (2014)
Dr Katharina Blattner (2015)
Dr
Ivan and Leonie (RNS) Howie
(2016)