Dr Abby Harwood, Central Region
My first experience with ruralism was when I was around 10 and my family moved to a mining town in Irian Jaya (Western New Guinea). The town doctor was an Australian GP who managed everything – literally everything. The closest hospital was a one-hour helicopter flight and then a three-hour flight away.
Fast forward to fifth year medicine in university, I took the opportunity to spend half of my General Medicine rotation in Bunbury, in the first pilot project that eventually led to the Rural Clinical School. And loved it. And then in final year, we all did a rural GP rotation which I, once again, thoroughly enjoyed.
I then applied for the Rural Training Scheme of the GP Training program in my intern year, to commence in PGY2. My intern and PGY2 years were spent at Royal Perth Hospital, and mainly rural/outer metro hospitals. I completed 11 months of ED in those two years and went on to do my Dip Obs and did over 200 deliveries in that 6-month term. I headed off to Karratha-Dampier for my first GP term and ended up staying there for 15 months before training to go to Kenya for work. During PGY5 I did 6 months of advanced skills in Paediatrics at the now Perth Children’s Hospital and 6 months of advanced skills in Emergency Medicine at Fremantle Hospital. Subsequently, I finished my training in PGY6 at Derby Regional Hospital where, as a DMO, in those days shared the on-call roster for ED, Paeds, Obs, and RFDS retrievals.
Being a Rural Generalist provides variety and an experience like no other in your professional career!
Photo: Dr Abby Harwood