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W Ian Cameron
Chief Executive Officer, New South Wales Rural Doctors Network, Level 3, 133 King Street, Newcastle, NSW 2300. icameronAT.nswrdn.com.au
To the Editor: Bourke is a small rural town in far northwest New South Wales with a population of about 3500. The Bourke Shire Council has recently published a fascinating small book entitled 100 lives of Bourke, which uses Bourke cemetery as a “window to the past”.1 Included in the 100 vignettes based on headstones in the cemetery is one for Dr George Faithfull, Bourke’s third doctor.
Dr Faithfull was born in Calcutta, India. He started medical studies in Edinburgh, Scotland, but did not complete them. He travelled to Australia, arriving in Victoria, and worked his way north (Dr Don Faithfull, grandson of George, personal communication). By 1885, he was working as a chemist in Bourke.2 In view of his experience as a “medical man” and his previous medical studies, he later became registered as a medical practitioner under Clause 3 of Act 70, The Medical Practitioners Further Amendment Act of 1900, where it was stated that:
It shall be lawful for the Medical Board or its Doctors to place upon a separate register the name of any person who has passed through a course of study as Medical Practitioner in NSW during five years before the passing of this Act.
Dr Faithfull was a doctor in Bourke and Goodooga from 1900 to 1908. He must have been one of the very first doctors to have gained what is now termed in NSW “conditional registration in an area of need”. To have become conditionally registered while practising as a chemist in Bourke, he must also be an early example of rural-based distance learning — a cornerstone of our new regionalised general practice training.
Dr George Faithfull and his wife,
Mary Faithfull (née Whitfield).
(Photo, Dr Don Faithfull.)
It is sobering to think that the changes made over the last few years by medical boards, and the streamlining of processes outlined in MedicarePlus, had precursors over a hundred years ago.
Doctors and their families were not exempt from the morbidity and mortality of the time. Three of Dr Faithfull’s 11 children died young and are buried in Bourke cemetery. Another Bourke doctor, Dr Sides, had three children die in infancy, and Dr Dey lost a six-month-old son. In 1901, a locum doctor died of heat stroke. More recently, in 1992, Bourke cemetery became the final resting place for another overseas-trained doctor, Professor Fred Hollows, who achieved international recognition for his work in ophthalmology in disadvantaged populations, particularly Indigenous Australians.
©The Medical Journal of Australia 2004 www.mja.com.au ISSN: 0025-729X
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