Media Release – Specialists Unite On a Medical Truck Headed to Outback Queensland

3 August 2018

SPECIALISTS UNITE ON A MEDICAL TRUCK HEADED TO OUTBACK QUEENSLAND

Specialists from all over the country will unite on board a new mobile medical clinic to provide outback Queenslanders with the healthcare they need, as Heart of Australia launches its second truck.

The new 34-wheel B-Double which features extra consultation rooms for a range of specialist services, including gynaecology, neurology and endocrinology, was built in Brisbane, allowing the service to expand its reach to 16 towns from mid-August.

The mobile clinic is the second truck for Heart of Australia which began in 2014 taking heart specialists to the bush in a custom built 18-wheeler clinic.

Brisbane cardiologist, Dr Rolf Gomes, mortgaged his home to build the first truck after being confronted by the health inequality facing Australians living in remote areas.

“We live in a first-world country in Australia, and yet people are dying of preventable illnesses, not because we lack treatments or medical solutions, but because the people living outside major cities lack access to medical specialists that we in the city often take for granted,” Dr Gomes said.

“Taking cardiologists to regional and remote towns has helped save more than 250 lives but we know people’s health needs extend far beyond heart conditions which is why this second truck is so important.”

The new truck will see gynaecologists, gastroenterologists, neurologists, geriatric medicine specialists and endocrinologists joining cardiologists on the 8000 kilometre a month round trip across rural and remote Queensland.

“The goal is to be able to deliver not only the specialists, but also state-of-the-art medical equipment needed to provide quality care. We say it’s about bringing Wickham Terrace to the bush – if you can find the equipment in my Brisbane clinic, you’ll find it on the truck,” Dr Gomes said.

A second truck also means doctors can spend more time treating patients and Heart of Australia can expand the service to another three towns on top of the 13 it already visits between Stanthorpe in the south and Charters Towers in the north.

“With just one truck, we were spending about half our time treating patients and the other half commuting,” Dr Gomes explained.

“Now we’ll spend 80 per cent of our time with outback Queenslanders and just 20 per cent driving, meaning the waitlist for people needing healthcare will reduce dramatically.”

A Queensland family donated $1 million to help build the new truck, along with support from corporate sponsors and private donations.

The bulk of the funding required to operate the program and deliver these essential medical services to the people of rural and regional Queensland is provided by corporate sponsors and private donations.

Foundation partner Arrow Energy’s Vice President External Relations and Tenure Management Leisa Elder said the expansion was great news.

“Heart of Australia has proved to be a leap forward in bringing medical care to people outside the major cities – the people in our areas of operations,” Ms Elder said.

“It is addressing an imbalance experienced by people in the bush. We were pleased to help Heart of Australia get off the ground in 2014, we’ve been proud of what it’s achieved to date and we’re excited about how this new rig will change lives in the Surat and Bowen basins.”

Dr Gomes said Heart of Australia’s mission is to have mobile clinics on country roads right across the nation.

“Today’s launch of a second medical truck is a great day for our team, for the people who have supported us, and most importantly for the people in the bush who we will be delivering specialist medical services to,” he said.

“Every Australian deserves access to quality healthcare, regardless of where they live.”

<ENDS>

Media enquiries: Veronica Jakobsen 0439 671 073

Timely support – for ladies first

Once again, we’re welcoming practical support from Toowoomba’s Fairholme College – this time it’s funding for a key piece of equipment for female patients.

And it’s particularly timely. Our “new” obstetrics/gynaecology specialist, Dr Siva, began his on-the-road role with Heart of Australia only a matter of days ago.

And … Fairholme is funding for us two colposcopes, which are a must-have for effective female health examinations.

Timely? Well … Dr Siva advises that one week after he notified Dalby region doctors of his first two days of clinics aboard our Big Heart Truck, he was “booked out”!

Thank you – again – Fairholme.

Come on a serious ride with us!

Here’s a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to “be right there” as our 18-tyre clinic-on-wheels hits the road to meet patients in towns across the West.

Our truck and on-the-road staff are featuring – on July 10 – in an episode of the popular Seven Network (Seven Plus) TV series Outback Truckers so you’ll be able to get a genuine feel for just what it is we do -and what it takes to do it.

more info – http://7plus.com.au/outback-truckers.

The next challenge – for Australia and the world

In a remarkable presentation to the Internet-based global “human values” exchange platform, TEDx, Heart of Australia Founder/CEO, Dr Rolf Gomes, has issued his own challenge to medical science and its practitioners in our world.

Citing the acclaimed success of India’s decades-long determination to end the scourge of polio, he says it’s time to – “not just develop new treatments, but to find effective ways of delivering those treatments to those who need it – by whatever means, not just trucks but by trucks, planes, boats, telemedicine, armies of volunteers … mobility of medicine for the masses.
“And why? Because every life counts”.

You can see and hear his presentation by going to: www.youtube.com/watch?v=b3dCBxRtOMs 

Case of “goosebumps” and Siva climbs aboard

A new face is about to join the Heart of Australia team of on-the-road doctors delivering specialist medical treatment to bush Queenslanders, thanks to an unexpected case of … wait for it … goosebumps.

As soon as he gets back from the latest of his several-times-a-year charity clinics in his birthplace of Sri Lanka and in the UK, gynaecology/obstetrics specialist Kanapathippillai Sivanesan – “just call me Siva”- will start regular visits to the West on our now-famous clinic-on-wheels.

The jolly, 44-year-old father of three studied and practised for 12 years in Britain before moving to Burnie in Tasmania. With his wife, Rizana, and their three children, Siva settled in Brisbane just three years ago.

He works in public and private hospitals in Ipswich and, he says, he’ll “absolutely” stay on the roster for bush town work helping to man Heart of Australia clinics.

Siva loves his medical specialties because of the “huge difference” in patients’ lives that can be achieved. “It’s just so rewarding – helping Mums to safely bring babies into the world. There’s just no price you can put on that.”

He’s quietly happy, too, that helped by generous sponsor donations of equipment for his Sri Lankan charity work, he can also make a difference to lives where he was born and where his mother still lives.

Of the Heart of Australia program, Siva says: ”Such a lot can be done. People don’t have to wait months, or drive hundreds of kilometres, to have any fears (about pregnancy progress) addressed.”

So what about those goosebumps? Siva makes no bones or apologies about “getting goosebumps” as he watched one of the ABC Australian Story reports featuring Heart of Australia founder Dr Rolf Gomes.

Soon after that, Siva was in a hospital café when he saw Dr Gomes walk by – “and I ran to him”. The rest, as they say, is (becoming) history.