Legendary All Black wing Stu Wilson becomes orderly at Tauranga Hospital
6 Mar, 2021 05:00 PM
6 minutes to read
Being back in a team environment is familiar to former All Blacks captain Stu Wilson. Photo / George Novak
Being back in a team environment is familiar to former All Blacks captain Stu Wilson. Photo / George Novak
He once flew down the wing in front of thousands of screaming rugby fans, but now former All Black captain Stu Wilson is ferrying patients up and down hospital hallways. Known as one of the greatest finishers of all time, the 66-year-old is now at home in the engine room of Tauranga Hospital.
Bay of Plenty District Health Board emergency operation s controller Brent Gilbert-De Rios said they did not have to evacuate patients from Whakatāne Hospital as they were outside the flood zone. However, the hospital’s Tsunami Plan was implemented and patients and staff in the hospital were relocated to the first floor of the Dawson Block on the hospital campus. In Northland, resident Rosie Stone, who has lived in the Helena Bay area for 30 years, said she had never had a warning “quite as dramatic as this”. She got the civil defence warning on her phone and just grabbed her dog and phone and drove to higher ground.
Quake aftermath: Always be ready to flee your home for three days
5 Mar, 2021 05:00 PM
8 minutes to read
Footage shows tsunami waves hitting New Zealand. Video / Claudia Maaka / Waiapu Civil Defence / Gina Pewhairangi / Dean Purcell
Footage shows tsunami waves hitting New Zealand. Video / Claudia Maaka / Waiapu Civil Defence / Gina Pewhairangi / Dean Purcell
Be ready at any moment to flee your home for three days. That s the advice from a Bay of Plenty community leader after earthquakes and tsunami alerts caused disruption across the Bay of Plenty and other parts of the country yesterday.
People from across the region fled for higher ground after a powerful magnitude 8.1 earthquake in the Kermadec area about 1000km northeast of New Zealand triggered a tsunami warning.
Health committee recommends Pāpāmoa accident and emergency centre, DHB in conversation
3 Mar, 2021 05:00 AM
4 minutes to read
Parliament have recommended the Bay of Plenty DHB seek a accident and emergency centre to cater for the growing population. Photo / File
A 24-hour accident and emergency centre based in Pāpāmoa could be a reality for residents thanks to the hard work and dedication of one widow. Judy Killalea s husband died on September 24, 2016, soon after he decided the 25-minute drive from Pāpāmoa to Tauranga Hospital was too far and he would wait until the morning.
He suffered from a chronic obstructive pulmonary disease for several years, then was diagnosed with cancer.