Award recipient humbled by accolade
PRESS RELEASE from the New Zealand Rural General Practice Network, 2012 Peter Snow Memorial Award winner
Award
recipient humbled by accolade
Former New Zealand Rural
General Practice Network chairperson Kirsty Murrell-McMillan
is the recipient of the 2012 Peter Snow Memorial
Award.
The accolade was announced at the New Zealand
Rural General Practice Network’s annual conference held
recently in Queenstown.
A Southland-based rural nurse
specialist, Kirsty was nominated under the “Innovation or
Service” category, which recognises her “outstanding
service to rural general practice and to rural communities
for many years, and her endless enthusiasm and drive in
nursing and education”.
The Peter Snow Memorial Award was set up to honour the life and work of Dr Peter Snow who passed away in March 2006.
“I am humbled to receive the Peter Snow Memorial Award. The Dr Peter Snow I knew was a unique and highly principled practitioner for whom I had great
respect.
“I thank my husband and my
colleagues for being the inspiration and drive behind my
work. I need to acknowledge that it was my husband who lured
me back to working in rural Southland and took me, through
his work, to live and to work in remote areas in New Zealand
such as Te Anau and two years in rural Africa. My personal
drive was to be well prepared vocationally for joining my
husband in more remote areas, as he was transferred with his
job in conservation.
“On my journey as a rural
nurse, I believe that my rural nurse colleagues and I
recognised the need to legitimise rural nursing practice, to
prepare and educate the next generation of nurses to be able
to work rurally and that they have specific training to
prepare them for the diversity of work experienced by rural
nurses.
“But in particular, I believe that rural
nurse practitioners are needed in rural areas. My dream has
been that nurse practitioners working in rural areas would
face less barriers and greater acceptance in providing
continuity of care to rural communities. This is because I
believe that rural nurses have been the back bone in
providing continuity of care in many areas especially where
areas are medically underserved.”
Kirsty spent her
early years growing up in Manapouri, where her family has
resided for six generations. She is a graduate from the
University of Sydney with a Masters in Rural and Remote
Nursing. She has taught rural nursing at both under graduate
and post graduate levels in Southland and Otago Schools of
Nursing. She now teaches at the Dunedin School of Medicine,
Department of General Practice and Rural Health and is
working to establish Invercargill as a learning centre in
general practice.
Kirsty was instrumental in merging the Rural Nurses’ National Network with the New Zealand Rural General Practice Network Board; served on the Board for a number of years and is immediate past Chair of the Network. She was the first nurse to hold this role for a general practice organisation internationally.
She is a Trustee for the Pat Farry Rural Education Trust; was a member of the Southern PHO transition board and Inaugural Nurse Trustee for the Southern PHO.
Kirsty was made a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit in the 2012 New Year’s Honours for services to nursing. She is passionate about promoting the team working within general practice and in particular provision of health care to rural communities.
About the award
Dr Peter 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)
Rural Nurse Specialist
Kirsty Murrell-McMillan
(2012).
ends