Bus Route Redirect

December 10th, 2011

We are trying to get bus services re routed to go past our new surgery.

If you would like to utilise this proposed service, please sign the petition at our surgery front desk.

 

New Kalamunda Surgery Update

December 10th, 2011

Progress is being made on the new surgery at the Kalamunda Hospital site.

The site works have been completed and over the next few months we should see the building start to take shape.

With some unexpected developments during the site works, the likely completion date has been pushed back towards September 2012. We will continue to keep you updated in the lead up to our big move.

Get the latest news to your email

November 16th, 2011

By registering your email on our website, you will ensure that you always stay up to date with the latest new from Mead Medical.

As well as patient information, we plan on updating you on changes to our staff and keeping you up to date with changes to our practice as we move up to our new building at Kalamunda Hospital.

NOW HERE- Online Script / Referral requests

November 16th, 2011

We have set up an innovative way of requesting scripts or referrals.

Simply click on the link on our home page.

Follow the prompts and away you go. Most of our doctors are undertaking this service. Why not try it today.

 

Terrie Blake Appointment As Nurse Manager

October 26th, 2011

We are thrilled to announce the appointment of Terri Blake as our new nurse manager. Having been at our practice for several years, Terri has stepped in to the role as nurse manager. We are sure she will bring her enthusiasm to the role and we look forward to working with her to further develop our nursing role within our practice.

Medical Centre in Making

September 27th, 2011

WORK has started on a new Kalamunda Primary Care Centre next to the Kalamunda Hospital site.

Two weeks ago, the land for the centre was cleared and construction should start in three months.

The centre is being created by Mead Medical and has been privately funded through Medfin Finance after the project was rejected for Federal funding.

Mead Medical is the oldest established medical group in the Kalamunda Shire and this new centre will take it from the 15 general practitioners on staff to about 20 – roughly 12 full-time equivalents.

On 4400sqm of land, the centre will have 10 consulting rooms for doctors, 3 theatres, 3 chair bays and 4 bed bays which will be staffed by several nurses.

Also working as a training centre for University of WA and Notre Dame medical students, the centre will have a pharmacy, pathology and meeting room for both staff and community purposes.

The Mead Medical group has been working towards the new Kalamunda centre for about seven years.

Practice doctor Warren Thyer said the new centre would see the closure of the smaller Mead Street site and work in conjunction with the Forrestfield centre, which would remain open.

He said it would also complement existing services in the area by other providers, including Kalamunda Hospital.

Expected to be completed by April 2012, it is hoped the centre will also ease the growing waiting lists for patients to see doctors, according to practice doctor Sean Stevens.

Medical centre staff and doctors met with Member for Kalamunda John Day MLA and site manager Alvin Harrison last Friday morning to celebrate the start of the works.

Mr Day said he was excited to see site works start after years of helping Mead Medical where he could.

“I think the community here will be very happy to see this development,” he said.

Somaliland Sojourn for Perth Doctors

September 27th, 2011

UWA Medical School and Australian Doctors for Africa (a fledgling WA charity) have agreed to assist the newHargeisa Medical School, in the capital of the Republic ofSomaliland. Assistance is in the form of donated equipment and regular visits from WA doctors to train new doctors so the (unofficial) nation can rebuild after years of civil war.

As recent as last March, Prof Trevor Parry, Dr Leon Cohen, Dr Anna Parker, and Dr Rod Thelander enjoyed the local hospitality to provide in-theatre and bedside teaching for medical students and interns – the first trip as a joint initiative of the two WA groups. UWA Medical School Dean Prof Ian Puddey and Emer/Prof David Allbrook had previously visited Hargeisa Medical School Dean Dr Deria Ereg, during which time it was decided to regularly send small teams of doctors from Perth to help train medical students and newly graduated doctors.

Anyone who is interested to help will be pleased to know that theRepublic of Somalia is the relatively safe and peaceful breakaway part of Somalia, which enjoys a stable government with law and order. Formed in 1991, the Republic has an area equivalent toEngland and Wales, supports 3.5 million people (predominantly sunni muslim), offers its men a life expectancy of around 50 years, and has about 45% of people living in Hargeisa or rural towns. Prior to 1960, the region was known as The British Protectorate of Somaliland, was only established in 2003 and the tiny nation is struggling to provide medical services for its people but it is happening – 75 medical students graduated last year (see http://khadar.powweb.com/admin/).

The most recent intrepid WA medical team spent just nine days lecturing and demonstrating to the 6th year medical students and interns in a wide variety of medical and surgical topics. The emphasis was on teaching practical clinical skills, something that is badly needed due to the limited number of well-trained clinicians and teachers. A lot of time was spent in the hospital wards with bedside teaching. Dr Leon Cohen assisted local surgeon Dr Sulieman Guleid.

The team stayed with the charismatic Mrs Edna Adan Ismail in the very impressive Maternity Hospital that she had built in 2002. Warm hospitality and time to meet other medical aid workers from the UK,USA and Norway all added to the goodwill, something that was acknowledged in speeches by students on the last day.

October 2010 is the next booked trip. Top of Dr Ereg’s wish list is teachers in ENT surgery, general surgery, neurology, psychiatry, internal medicine and urology.

UWA’s African Connection

September 27th, 2011

A group of senior WA medicos have turned their time and attention to helping the underprivileged medical students of war-ravaged Somaliland, an independent region within Somalia occupying the territory once known as British Somaliland. The consortium of doctors, led by Drs Rod Thelander and Gary Hastwell, and UWA Medical School Dean Prof Ian Puddey, is looking to cement a close relationship between UWA and Somaliland’s University of Hargeisa Medical School.

Hargeisa’s medical school was established by Dr Deria Ereg in 2003, with a 6-year curriculum based on the British medical school model and the first students graduating in 2009. In March this year, Ian, Gary, and Rod journeyed to Somaliland to lay the groundwork for what is hoped to become ongoing support for Hargeisa’s medical school. They were greeted with great enthusiasm by a contingent including the Health Minister and the President of the University.

There can be no doubt that WA doctors are committed to the cause. Drs Gary Hastwell and Diana Wellby have donated all of their obstetric and gynaecology equipment. UWA and its medical students have also donated a container-load of textbooks. Members of the group and other doctors, including Mr Graham Forward, director of Australian Doctors for Africa, plan to return to Hargeisa in February next year to once again lend their time, money, and equipment to the burgeoning medical school.

It hoped that a Memorandum of Understanding will be signed between the two medical schools, which will pave the way for regular, organised teaching missions. The team is especially keen on recruiting like-minded medicos to the cause, where they will do ward rounds and lecture students (lessons are taught in English). Doctors of all disciplines are sought. If you’re interested, contact Rod (below).

Dr Gary Hastwell demonstrates the use of ultrasound to doctors and midwives at the maternity hospital in Hargeisa.

Dr Gary Hastwell demonstrates the use of ultrasound to doctors and midwives at the maternity hospital in Hargeisa.

Somaliland Medical Students’ Stethoscope Appeal

Dr Rod Thelander would like to collect as many stethoscopes and other equipment as possible to take with him when he returns to Somaliland in February.

“Because Somaliland is a very poor country, most of the medical students cannot afford their own stethoscope or sphygmomanometer. For this reason, we’re asking doctors to consider buying themselves a new stethoscope and donating their old stethoscopes to the appeal. Other items gratefully accepted include aneroid sphygmomanometers, tendon hammers, and ophthalmoscope-auriscope sets,” Rod said.

Equipment donations can be left at all St John of God Pathology collection centres throughout the Perth, and should be addressed to Mr Mike Watts, Coordinator of the Somaliland Medical Students’ Stethoscope Appeal. Donations can also be sent directly to Dr Rod Thelander, 12 Mead St, Kalamunda WA 6076.