Published Friday, April 26, 2024 / By Ryan Kevelighan
In this week’s podcast episode, Dr. Jim Ferry joins us with our director Ryan Kevelighan. Dr. Jim Ferry is an Obstetric and Gynaecologist Specialist with decades of medical experience, globally and across Australia. Tune in as Dr. Jim Ferry explains why he decided to retire from his successful private practice and enter “locum land”.
SEASON 1 EPISODE 3, DR. JEAN-YVES KANYAMIBWA AND BENJAMIN LEPKE
Benjamin Lepke 00:00
Hello, everyone, and welcome to episode three of our 1 in Focus series which aims to have a conversation with our working doctors, who we've got good strong relationships with, or our internal staff to get an understanding of what it is, what they do, where they've come from, and what they've been through to get to where they are. So, this week's episodes, I'll be talking to a very good friend of mine, Dr. Jean-Yves Kanyamibwa, who is currently residing in the Sunshine Coast and hailing from Rwanda and in the UK and over here. We're going to have a conversation with him about his pathway to where he is now and what now sits ahead of him. So welcome. We'll call you Yanni.
Dr. Yanni 00:54
Yeah. Thanks, Ben. Thank you very much. I'm honoured.
Benjamin Lepke 00:59
Jean-Yves Kanyamibwa known as Yanni.
Dr. Yanni 01:00
I'm honoured to join you on this podcast. I really appreciate everything you've done for me. When you asked me if I'd be happy to do such a thing, I was very happy to help. You've been very key in my path to where I am here in Australia. So, it's a small price. It's a small token, not even a price. This is a token of my appreciation.
Benjamin Lepke 01:22
Thank you. Well, good place to start, so why don't you tell us more about yourself, Yanni. Where do you come from? What brought you to Australia?
Dr. Yanni 01:32
I was born in the south of France in a town called Montpellier, with my brother who was born a couple of years later, Jean-Hubert moved to Rwanda. In Rwanda there was a war there that happened, so we were refugees for a little while in the Central African Republic, and then flew to Cameroon, then to France, where we settled for a year, then a year and a half in Montpellier again. I did a bit more of my primary school education there, then moved to the UK to Cambridge, hence the British accent from about the age of eight, where I did most of my schooling there. I went to University at St. George's Medical School in London tooting then graduated in 2011. I did my F1 and F2 years, which first was the second year PGY1 and PGY2 in Cambridge and in Kingsland so East Anglian deanery, where I was from. I then moved over to Australia in 2013 in Newcastle, that's how I got here.
Benjamin Lepke 02:38
Very good. Where you taught in French when you were a kid?
Dr. Yanni 02:41
Yeah, I basically spoke just French until I was eight, and then, learned English when I moved to Cambridge.
Benjamin Lepke 02:49
How was that transition to the UK? Do you remember?
Dr. Yanni 02:52
Yeah, it was a culture shock, and it was interesting, you know, like, it's all just the food it was hectic, custards.
Benjamin Lepke 03:01
Like going from snails to custards.
Dr. Yanni 03:05
Going from frogs and snails and like, croissants to sponges, well what the hell's going on there?
Benjamin Lepke 03:14
The joys of British cuisine. Well, so you did that in the UK. Got to F1 and 2, what then? What made you make the decision to move to Australia?
Dr. Yanni 03:26
Yeah, I guess there are definitely push and pull factors. You know, for me growing up in the South of France a little bit and in Africa, the weather is one thing, but the NHS and its dysfunction. I remember when I actually left and had an exit interview with my urology consultant. I remember Mr. Mahesh Kumar, said to me, “Yanni if I were you, I'd go to Australia and not even think about coming back for the next five years’ and that was 10 years ago. So, it was just a sense of adventure, a bit of wanderlust, and just a sense that UK was probably heading for some trouble. It did materialise, Brexit and the rest of it, COVID so yeah, I wasn't really sure whether I wanted to do emergency initially. In the UK, I was more into anaesthetics, maybe paediatrics, anaesthetics, and then I kind of fell into ED well. I fell into ED and then I realised that it's actually a different specialty really. It is practiced differently in Australia and it's more interesting here. Well, I always explain it as if you think of the critical care specialties of ED, anaesthetics, and intensive care - this is just a big generalisation to explain it. If you create a Venn diagram of all those three specialties and think about all those key jobs and procedures within a hospital. In the UK, key critical care skills and procedures that one will be expected to do. In the UK, I found that the anaesthetist had a great proportion of those skill sets in the hospital. So they ran the MET calls, and the retrieval services have a lot more anaesthetists. I found that you're more likely to see intensivists in the UK than you are here, and the intensivists or the anaesthetists, that train and ICU in or vice versa, then you are here. Then your ED and emergency A&E in the UK, it's sort of left to wither on the vine a little bit and you're much more of the term, it's used a lot, as a triage monkey. The KPIs are more draconian, and you're expected to see someone turn them around and sort of kick them off to a specialty social assessment unit or to a medical assessment, within an hour, hour or two. But you're not really seeing people, you're not really using your skills as much. When I came to Australia, I'm intubating, more, doing more procedures, you're spending more time. I just found that the training was more extensive and the clinical acumen, I guess, was more robust. That was my opinion, and that attracted me, and I was oh okay, this is potentially quite interesting.
Benjamin Lepke 04:28
That might be the transition of why you initially wanted to do anaesthesia in the UK, and now moving into ED.
Dr. Yanni 06:08
Yeah, and I still maintain that if I was in the UK, I would have probably done anaesthetics.
Benjamin Lepke
Yeah, why do you think there’s that difference?
Dr. Yanni
Wow, that’s an expansive question, actually one of my last job interviews, actually for the Alfred, they threw that in the interview, they said, "So what is the difference between Australia and England?" I was just like, wow, are you really going to ask me that question? Why? I'll try to answer that question succinctly. I think it is multifactorial, you got to understand it from a kind of socio-economic perspective, sort of outside of the hospital, there are lots of forces. So, the UK has almost 70 million people and older healthcare infrastructure, my impression is that there is less money in the system anyway, and there's way more pressures. So at the point of service, at the point of patient contact, there's so much more pressure in the system to see any sort of unit of patients as quickly as possible and transfer them on. Make sure that those ED clinicians are literally just triaging them, and then making the decisions for where to go. So that's one issue there's just not enough money in the system, there's a lot of red tapes and it's really difficult to change that. I think, my impression is that in Australia, there is a bit more autonomy within the healthcare system, and there's less intervention from the government to try and meet those KPIs. It also feels like the medical bodies are more powerful, comparatively, compared to the medical bodies in the UK. So, you know, yes, we've got the KPIs, yes, we've got the near times, but we don't need to meet them as closely. In New Zealand, they talk for about six hours, anytime, six hours, so that's one example. I also think, there is just more money, I'm not an economist but, I think on the ground, I get everyone has way more money swirling around in the Australian healthcare system compared to the UK. Point and case, like when I was locumming, for example, I noticed, you know, locumming up and down the East Coast, up and down the West Coast new hospitals, they are all less than five years old. All the EDs have got four or five ultrasounds, and there's a 10th of the patients than in any UK Hospital. That is real life. Like, there's way more money going around, and ultimately, it makes you feel much less like a flogged workhorse, working here. You're more respected and you are more valued and part of that is the financial return and that quality of life return, it's important. Why do you think there is a difference? Is that an expansive question?
Benjamin Lepke 08:56
Absolutely. It's one of the reasons why Australia and New Zealand, aside from the geography and what people want to do, to kind of see the healthcare system is viewed, and quite rightly, as a place to come and work and work within due to quite a lot of those factors you just mentioned.
Dr. Yanni 09:12
Not mentioning the weather, not mentioning travel, red tape, the friction.
Benjamin Lepke 09:18
Well, moving on, let's go back to yourself then so everything that we've just discussed with some drivers for you to come to Australia. So you arrived, and you're in Newcastle, how did you get into training? What was training like? You made the decision to follow the ED pathway, how did that come about? How was the training process?
Dr. Yanni 09:39
Yeah, so I came to Australia straight into an ED job at the Calvary Mater in Newcastle, which was good. I think there were about 30 doctors that had emigrated from the UK.
Benjamin Lepke 09:50
And that is only one hospital.
Dr. Yanni 09:50
That's only for Newcastle, just for Newcastle and at the time, 2013, it was much easier to get on to the program as a UK Doctor. It was just a case of signing up, getting some references from other ED consultants and then you could get on to the pathway. I remember that the closing date was rapidly arriving, like December 2013, I only arrived in August 2013, so I basically got on pretty quickly before the closing date. Then subsequently, it's become a lot harder, you have got to do all sorts of things, and I can't keep up with that. Then I got on pretty quickly and then did my primaries in about April 2014 and it's progressed through to being a junior reg, in early 2015. In that interim, I moved from the Marter to John Hunter and then moved to Port Macquarie, for a better opportunity, to get my anaesthetics and intensive care training. Stayed there for three years, and then moved to the Sunshine Coast for my late-phase training, for my fellowship.
Benjamin Lepke 10:50
So, from Port Macquarie, did you move to do your advanced training in the Sunshine Coast then?
Dr. Yanni 10:55
No, I did my primary written in May/April 2014, I sat my viva, then I had to re-sit it again in 2015. So, I got it on the second attempt then that allowed me to basically get into that late phase, or was it the early phase? I can't remember the terms.
Benjamin Lepke 11:17
So many phases.
Dr. Yanni 11:18
So many phases and it's changing again. I basically progressed to being a reg proper in Port Macquarie and you need your anaesthetics and ICU to progress really into being a competent senior reg and it was easy to get it in Port Macquarie but yeah, I ended up staying three years there.
Benjamin Lepke 11:34
Because getting those critical care terms also opened up other doors and avenues as well in terms of opportunities.
Dr. Yanni 11:39
Absolutely it did, first and foremost, it's just that personal sense of comfort. You know, you're just a bit more reassured as an ED clinician; once you've got those skill sets, once you go onto night shifts and you can handle an airway, it's much better. It does open doors from a locumming perspective, from a senior reg jobs perspective. Pretty much as reg the second or third question that asked you is what airway skills do you have? Can we put you on night shifts?
Benjamin Lepke 12:08
Yeah. Will you work by yourself? - The main question? Well, let's segway slightly then, I've known you for a long time now and worked with you. So, let’s talk about locumming throughout your training. How was juggling locum work and training? How did you manage that? Did you take big chunks of time off to do the work? Did you do it in between? How did you manage that balance?
Dr. Yanni 12:30
How did I manage the balance?
Benjamin Lepke 12:32
How did you manage balance? Would you have done it differently?
Dr. Yanni 12:34
I managed it. I think my perspective on locumming has changed necessarily through my experience. I was perhaps ignorant and naive because I didn't really know about it initially. You know, there's a bit of a school of thought that you shouldn't be doing that, you should just focus on the pathway and just progress and not knowing any better, I probably subscribed to that a little bit but what I did find, I think it happens to a lot of trainees to be honest with you. After doing my primaries, moving around, and having some sick family members in the UK, you do get a bit of wear and tear and perhaps a bit of burnout. I did feel quite exhausted, coming into sort of 2017/18 and actually, I didn't realise I needed to take some time out. I was actually just thinking about it, it took me about three months, three to six months to think, I just need to take time out and when I did, I didn't really know how to make it happen. I didn't really know about the locumming scene that much, it was another consultant that put me onto it, put me on to you and it was actually incredibly daunting to take a year out and to locum, it was very daunting, I felt to say felt like I was failing, I felt like a failure taking a year off.
Benjamin Lepke
You felt like you weren’t progressing.
Dr. Yanni
It's ridiculous to think of it now but I was genuinely petrified of taking it initially, I was thinking six months, I was like, actually, I need to take 12 months. That's what we'll take time out, refresh, and then how do I make it happen because when you're kind of you're really privileged enough to be a doctor, your career path is laid out in front of you, and you kind of have to change gears from automatic to manual and make it all happen. So, it's daunting, but a couple of months into it like this is the best thing. This is the best decision, yes financially for sure but also from a wanderlust perspective, you know getting to see basically every state in Australia now except Canberra via work and I think it gave me a huge bump in terms of genuine acquired confidence because of being exposed to so many different looks of what, excuse my French when the shit hits the fan.
Benjamin Lepke
And who’s around to support you.
Dr. Yanni
Yeah, it exposes you time and time again to your own foibles, your own failings that are covered by the specific kind of by the system that you're in, right. So because your work keeps working in that healthcare system, the specific processes and policies and guidelines and what have you just always seem to protect you for whatever look you go into, the other side of Australia is completely different and then you realise actually I'm not, that's not good enough, I need to be way better. You do that enough times and I remember coming back to Sunshine Coast, it I just felt like a completely different, I felt like a completely different condition and I could see the response in my other consultants, they were like, "Oh, this he has grown". To come back to my initial point of my perspective and my thoughts on locumming it has changed through those experiences. Now, I'm actively encouraging people, I remember one of the very senior facems in the college and Port Macquarie, one of my DMT said to me, rather, I thought rather cryptically in 2016, before I took my year off, I've always thought about it. He said, he said, Yanni, whatever you do, you must locum and locum in as many different places as possible. I don't know if that was an observation on my, for me, maybe? Who knows? Regardless, I think it's true for most clinicians, actually, it's true for most clinicians and regrettably. You can tell when people haven't moved around because they have one, you know, they slice the one school of thought and they skin the cat. Yeah, one or two ways, and not many different ways and human beings are complicated, but I'd be able to come at it from multiple angles.
Benjamin Lepke 16:32
Absolutely. Fantastic. Well, so back refreshed, and reinvigorated, you're ready to move forward and take out the final exam. So, let's talk about return to work and then your progression up towards the written and OSCE.
Dr. Yanni: 16:47
Yeah, so returned to work in progression to written in OSCE. So, I would just make the point in that year out, it wasn't just traveling, looking around. I didn't actually I saved quite a bit of money and I spent that on exams and courses, and I did the back half of the six months. I was ramping up my studies so that was really helpful, I was sleeping normally and that helps your memory helps your capability to study as night shifts, as we all know, it just wrecks you. So, coming back into my normal training program, yeah, I basically, I had two attempts at the written and I sort of fell in that COVID timeframe where my exam was postponed, that kind of affected my timing and the energy and COVID. Anyway, narrowly missed the written. And then I went again and passed it on a second sitting and then pass the OSCE in the next sitting, yeah.
Benjamin Lepke:
Congratulations.
Dr. Yanni:
Thank you.
Benjamin Lepke 17:44
What advice would you give to people that are sat in that state of anxiety for the written and the OSCE ahead of them? Like, what did you do in part of your preparing for them, that you felt now looking back on? It was yes, that was great. I'm glad I did that.
Dr. Yanni 18:02
Yeah, I think you've got to understand yourself, I'm very wary to give one specific bit of advice if it's done right because we're so different in the way we learn, and the way we study. When I'm helping registrars, and friends go through the process and they're asking me for help, I actually just try and listen to how they approach, first and foremost to help me understand them. Hopefully, in some way, help them understand how they go about it because, by the time you get to that level, you're actually pretty good at studying. It's more about refining what you're doing to get over this last significant hump. I do think though, a lot of it is, the top two inches, a lot of it is psychological. After you've understood yourself, I think one of the key principles, everyone talks about this being a marathon. If anyone has done long-distance running, and I have actually done long-distance running. The thing that you find very quickly is how well you're recovering. It's about your self-care, it’s about your recovery, and how well you're looking after yourself, whilst maintaining your work-life balance, and your relationships. How you can maintain that so that you can use the metaphor of running to keep up that 100 K, 100 kilometers a week of running for those 52 weeks for the year and a half. It is intense, so you need to be able to recover and stay relatively fresh. I focus really hard on that aspect and how to maintain my sanity and how to avoid or not avoid burnout, but to minimise burnout so that I could maintain consistency. How do I do that? I actually cut back on my hours; I think that's quite important. Night shifts wreck you, and I think it's cumulative by the end, by the time we get to the late phase, you're not as fresh as you were when you were in PHO. I can't tell that to the PHOs coming in that really chipper like I went straight through the prac, you know, you've got a lot of energy but it's actually huge, it's cumulative.
Benjamin Lepke 19:57
It's just that intimate burnout phase.
Dr. Yanni 19:58
You do, you do but cutting back on the hours I think helped me, especially being like, on my own, single, COVID, with no family around me. Therefore, locuming was helpful doing the old shift a month because, by that time, I felt that I had enough of a base clinical, like time on the floor that I didn't need to do full time, I could go and pass my exams. I think exercise is really important, personally, I'd get up early, do something gentle in the morning, get my blood flow going, good food, breakfast, and protein it sounds so basic, but it helps. When I avoided them, I just fell and then it would just be like regimental nine o'clock, I'd be at my desk, good two, three hours, break. In the afternoon, I'd do something more like weights or something, then I do my proper home so gently in the morning, heavier in the afternoon, and then I do an evening session of study again. And then after about five, or six hours of study in that day, my next goal was to be fresh for the next day.
Benjamin Lepke 19:59
To try and get to sleep.
Dr. Yanni 20:04
To be fresh for nine o'clock the next day and, you know, saunas for me just sitting at a desk, regular massages.
Benjamin Lepke 21:15
Keeping relaxed.
Dr. Yanni 21:16
Yeah, keeping relaxed, and being kind to yourself. I would say as well, the other thing that was quite helpful, and actually a surprising number of fellow senior registrars and FACEMU's that perhaps isn't voice is psychologists.
Benjamin Lepke 21:30
Right, okay.
Dr. Yanni 21:30
Yeah. I think it's just we're just not open enough. I think but if you speak to quite a lot of registrars there's a surprising amount that uses them and it's a specific type of psychologist, a performance psychologist, and they tend to focus on elite sportsmen and doctors. They are literally the two clients, and that says a lot about the process. This is the analogy of I just kept coming back to this like a marathon and being like, an elite athlete, and looking at yourself through the prism of an athlete. So if you're an elite athlete, you've got your sports psychology, you got your nutritionist, you've got your physiotherapists, you've got your like your support team and that is what it's like heading into these exams. And for me, I really had to break it down with no support system around me and COVID and being a senior reg, but it was breaking it down that allowed me to understand how to get through it.
Benjamin Lepke 22:31
That's very interesting actually, I hadn't really considered it because it was quite like an athlete or a sports person, because you know, a track runner it’s them, they're going they are training themselves to be the best to win. Everyone else is not it's not a team sport effectively, you know, this a team with your team around you, supporting you as individuals. So, your psychologists and all that becomes your team becoming a team. It's you, yeah, effectively so, it's like building that team for yourself to help you.
Dr. Yanni 22:58
Have you had friends that are like athletes, or professional athletes?
Benjamin Lepke 23:03
I've been involved in sports. I've seen a couple of my friends, they get to a fairly high level in sports, etc. But no actual athletes
Dr. Yanni
Or professional sportsmen.
Benjamin Lepke
Not personally.
Dr. Yanni 23:13
Because it's quite interesting when you get to know them. It helps you understand, like this world. So, I remember in 2008, I did a London Marathon Guinness World Record fastest marathon dribbling a basketball. I know it was crazy, crazy.
Benjamin Lepke
Did you?
Dr. Yanni
I did, yeah, have I not tell you?
Benjamin Lepke 23:30
No, so you did a London Marathon dribbling a basketball?
Dr. Yanni
Yeah. I though told you.
Benjamin Lepke
No. I have no idea you've done that..
Dr. Yanni 23:37
You just haven't read my CV. It's just you just have not read my CV.
Benjamin Lepke
That would be close to beating in one of my favourite things on a CV, which is coming in a certain place in paper rock scissors World Championship.
Dr. Yanni
Who said that?
Benjamin Lepke 23:51
Well, someone did say that on one of their CVs at some point throughout my career, which I quite enjoyed reading.
Dr. Yanni 23:56
Oh really?
Benjamin Lepke 23:57
But I did definitely miss you doing the dribbling at the London Marathon wow.
Dr. Yanni 24:00
I did, that is more another story but what that did is it exposed me to athletes as well. So, in the London Marathon, they had a section for Guinness world record holders and we went in with the athletes. But also, around that time I did, I was doing a lot of athletics and track athlete, and one of my friends was me had a few friends. You just realised there's another level of focus, it's another level altogether. It's all fun and games with amateurs but the professionals are on another level and it's similar, it's obsessive, it's always pathological.
Benjamin Lepke 24:33
Yeah, well, you are now a FACEM. You and our fellow emergency medicine specialist. What doors are opening for you? What's ahead of you in the future at the moment?
Dr. Yanni 24:44
What doors are opening? I think, I'm going to be honest, the first thing is the sword of Damocles is no longer hanging over my head by a thin thread it's just a weight lifted.
Benjamin Lepke 25:00
You must be a humongous weight.
Dr. Yanni 25:01
There is a huge weight but no, just fellow job opportunities, obviously, financially, it's a lot more. I'm not the one paying for lots of courses and exams and getting quite five work properly now for a little bit. But you know, the world does open up, I'm going moving to Melbourne to do my fellowship role in the next few months. I hope to go potentially to London and do some hymns in the year after but also just got more bandwidth and mental space to delve into some passions I've had to keep on the back burner. For the best part of four- or five-years things like a project where we're both working on in Rwanda with yourself with 1Medical, with regards to partnering to do some charitable work and some philanthropic work with 1Medical and I guess that has, there's loads of potential avenues and directions that could potentially go. I'm working with your colleague, Ryan, and yourself to finalise a trip to Rwanda in July for three weeks.
Benjamin Lepke 26:00
Yeah, that's extremely exciting.
Dr. Yanni 26:02
I mean, that is a door that opens up. I could never.
Benjamin Lepke 26:05
You've not had time to do that.
Dr. Yanni 26:06
I can, I can think about that now.
Benjamin Lepke 26:08
You can start planning holidays.
Dr. Yanni 26:09
I can start planning holidays, I can start reading non-medical books. Oh, my God, I can start watching a Netflix episode without getting guilty all seasons, that type of stuff, but the doors have opened, I mean, I've only been a FACEM now for two, three months so the doors are open, but I'm still in the wake of feeling, what's the radio-friendly term?
Benjamin Lepke 26:09
Free?
Dr. Yanni 26:24
Free, there we go.
Benjamin Lepke 26:36
Excellent, so if any of our listeners are now junior doctors thinking about embarking on a path, you know, is there any advice you give to people? If you can talk to yourself, back at PGY4? Was there any advice that you would give?
Dr. Yanni 26:49
It's really hard to give advice that's generic for everyone.
Benjamin Lepke 26:54
Let's change that then. What would you tell yourself?
Dr. Yanni 26:56
I think that can actually be more helpful to everyone. I think to be kind to yourself, I say it a lot. Just, take it easy relax, alright it's not about smashing out incredible days just try it. I sometimes just tell some of the junior regs to try and go for 80% every day 8/10 is good enough every day, and you don't have to be 10 out of 10 because you burn yourself out real quick. Take plenty of breaks, and advocate for your own well-being because the healthcare system will take more out of you than you will out of it. Do look after yourself and advocate and be aware of limitations of your own, I guess, burnout. I read a stat, 50 to 80% of the care staff clinicians experience burnout in their career and it has many guises, it has many forms, with regards to I think it's important to have many allies. I'm a diversity and inclusion representative for ACEM, myself and two others in Australia and three others in New Zealand. I work with Claire Skinner, the college president, and the incumbent president Stephen Guney on issues relating to discrimination, bullying, and sexual harassment, as well as a diverse sort of gamut of issues relating to DNI. I think it's important to have allies, it's important to collaborate to speak and share your experiences, specifically for me, in my experience as a black doctor, in the healthcare sector, it took me a while to realise how to maneuver the space in my own skin, especially as a junior doctor. Again, being a junior doctor often means that you're also a young person, so those two things are happening at the same time and what does it mean? How do I sort of feel comfortable in my skin? Being other and different? How do I find my voice? How do I navigate what can be perceived and what can be real institutional racism? It can be very challenging, very, very, very challenging, and part of the reason why I ended up seeing a psychologist in the end. What I would say to a younger self is to listen, to be aware, and listen carefully. Don't discredit what people are saying or what you're feeling, that is often true. You can get gaslit very easily when you are othered and it may take time for you to find your voice and to find your true self but just keep plowing that and keep pushing forward in that direction. Use friends you got to crack at some eggs to make omelets. You do have to trust people and that can be hard when you feel othered and yeah, just be kind to yourself.
Benjamin Lepke 29:36
Be kind to yourself, the resonating point behind, throughout this conversation.
Dr. Yanni 29:40
I can't agree more, be kind to yourself. It is brutal you know, it's a difficult career being a senior reg in an emergency, I think is one of the most difficult jobs in the hospital. It's one of those and on top of that you're doing the fellowship exam and on top of that, you're moving this, that and trying to support yourself doing that locumming, you're doing night shifts. It fries, your nervous system, be kind to yourself.
Benjamin Lepke 30:02
On all of that, final point, tell me the feeling of when you open that email and you had a pass mark, to make all of what you just said worth it. Can you even explain that feeling?
Dr. Yanni 30:12
For those not watching, I'm taking a deep breath. It was emotional, it was deeply emotional, it was very sort of still, the peace it was. I opened it, but I actually didn't, I just sat there for an hour before I opened it. I opened it on my own, it was raining, and I was in Mooloolaba by Mooloolaba Beach on the sunny coast and opened it. They have this, you open the email, and it's a notification with a red cross and three lines, so the first thing you see is the red cross. But that's just the notification. It's like, once you read the notification, you press the red cross, but yeah, big red cross. So, like, one more blow but it was very validating, very relieved. I think the initial one of the initial feelings is like the absence of that pain, that worry. That's the joy that comes but it's the absence of it best and then the joy takes a while to come.
Benjamin Lepke 30:45
Because you realise, it finally breaks through.
Dr. Yanni 31:25
You're no longer pushing against, that's no longer defining you, because it defines you for like, three, four years. I describe it to one of my friends who one of my Vascular consultant friends who passed his exam in the UK, it's like you're in a rocket ship, and you're at peak velocity trying to break through the final atmosphere, and you're just hurdling for years and finally you break through into space.
Benjamin Lepke
It’s serenity.
Dr. Yanni
And it's like, what do I do? That's what it feels like.
Benjamin Lepke 31:54
Excellent.
Dr. Yanni 31:55
I hope it didn't sound too dreary and negative; it is good. And it's not all bad it's just you've got to have your wits about it, you got to be smart. You got to buck smart, you've got to seek a lot of advice from different people, think carefully, about how it's going to work for you, and reflect a lot. There's a lot of like, self-reflective work that, you know, you're asked to do as part of your CPD. And I think you see the use of it as you progress, but I would urge people to reflect early on, think carefully, but reflect continuously on every interaction, especially if it feels wrong, or it feels like you can't quite put it, put your finger on it.
Benjamin Lepke 32:33
That's a very important point that, in all walks of life. I actually do that in here, with the team and the junior consultants I have, I tell people to reflect on conversations. So, you know, active listening that we do, but you're actively understanding what's happening and if something doesn't go in the direction you're expecting, it reflect and go, well, where was the breaking point? How did that happen? Where did that? How did I end up here, you analyse that part and think about how you could do that differently. Without reflection, you would then just potentially meander on and make that mistake again. But if you do self-reflect, it's an extremely powerful tool.
Dr. Yanni 33:06
There's not enough lessons, there's not enough pages in a textbook that they give you a medical school to give you the lessons that you need to learn to progress in business or in medicine. I would ask you one question, from your vantage point, what I want to ask the same question you asked me but sort of from your vantage point. So, what do you think are the lessons learned, the pointers you would give to someone starting off in emergency medicine in Australia, to progress through the training program and to make it to become a FACEM? Because you interact with a lot, you've got many doctors.
Benjamin Lepke 33:41
I do, I've spoken to hundreds, thousands of doctors throughout my career.
Dr. Yanni 33:46
I think your perspective is interesting as well.
Benjamin Lepke 33:48
Yeah, my perspective is the same as yours, to be honest. But I saw I didn't have to find it, I just knew it. And what I mean by that is, is that I'm not a doctor, I'm not medically trained however, upon speaking with thousands of doctors, and I only ever talk to emergency medicine-trained doctors, I do find that a varied career and work experience, whether that may be full-time all the way through or indeed locum work, working in different hospitals, different settings, rural and remote, regional, etc. however, it may be, different states because different states practice differently as well. Getting out there, I tend to find gives doctors a lot more confidence, which then I find from speaking to them that they tend to progress better throughout the course of the fellowship, etc. because they do house that confidence. They have, as you were saying before that breadth of knowledge and experience, and they've been put in difficult situations and they've been put outside their comfort zone and they've managed to deal with it. Importantly, they've learned about themselves they've learned that yes, I can actually do this because as we all know the exams for the emergency medicine college and fellowship are extremely daunting. So, you can't not of put yourself severely outside your comfort zone multiple times before that and with the hope of getting past it. So, I find that having a varied career in terms of emergency medicine, I do find that doctors who take the old the six to twelve months out, what that also does is it relieves quite a lot of stress in the personal life, mostly financial. So, like you did, you started to get burnout. I've personally burnt out myself, I'm not a doctor, I've burnt out in recruitment, and I sprinted for 10 years and then fell off, fell sideways. I then took time off and I travelled the world, and then came back and started again is exactly the same thing. You're sprinting from university all the way up to becoming a reg, you know, you're talking nine years, eight, nine years?
Dr. Yanni 35:49
Through uni as well for me.
Benjamin Lepke 35:51
Yeah, exactly. So you've got all of that don't be scared of taking that six to twelve months out, and then you enter it back in refreshed, less debts, seen the country you've made sure you want to do ED. More importantly, you've made sure you want to know where you want to live for the next three or four years while you train and you've learned more about yourself and then you enter the new stage of confidence.
Dr. Yanni 36:13
Some things require it's a bit like that, you know, podcasts, the long form conversations become really popular across the world, because some conversations, be it with yourself or with other people, just require a long form and time to breathe. You know, that's why taking that time allows part of your own self to just marinate and just, without having to do a night shift on Thursday. You know, and just to be, it's really healthy, I think.
Benjamin Lepke 36:41
Yeah absolutely.
Dr. Yanni 36:43
Agreed.
Benjamin Lepke 36:43
Brilliant. Well, thank you very much for your time.
Dr. Yanni 36:46
No, thank you.
Benjamin Lepke 36:47
I look forward to working with you, moving forward as you mentioned, the charitable piece for Rwanda, which we'll be discussing in a lot more detail when people find out about it.
Dr. Yanni 36:56
TBC, to be confirmed.
Benjamin Lepke 36:58
Indeed, so have a great day.
Dr. Yanni 37:00
Likewise, more locum paperwork to do now.
Benjamin Lepke 37:04
You need to give me all your documents. Cheers, buddy.
Dr. Yanni 37:07
Thank you.
Benjamin Lepke 37:08
Thank you. Bye bye
In this episode, we cover the following topics:
1Medical doctors, if you are interested in being featured in our next podcast, please contact Ryan Kevelighan on ryan@1medical.com.au.
[00:00:00] Ryan Kevelighan: Hello and welcome to the latest in our One-in-focus series where I'm delighted to have Dr. Jim Ferry with us today. Great to have you here today, Jim. Thank you very much for coming and giving us your time here. And as you know, we're trying to showcase the interesting lives of doctors and people that are out and about in the field.
Jim, you've got an extensive career starting off in Scotland in the 70s, I believe they qualified as a GP, later as a specialist obstetrician. You transitioned across to Australia at some point in the depths there. There was a stint in Canada and various other places. You're a well-known feature in Manly as well with a long career there as well.
And I think there's… there's even somebody in our office whose family member has been delivered by your fair hands at some points. So, it's a… it's a small world. I'll hand it over to you Jim and give us brief background on yourself.
[00:00:44] Jim Ferry: Okay, pleasure to be here, Ryan. I hope I can be of some help to people who are thinking of doing locums. My name's Jim Ferry, as you've mentioned, I'm in my, uh, 60s, rather well into them, may I say. I was born in Glasgow, brought up in Glasgow. I did my medical degree in Glasgow, and I did a year of internship in Scotland, and a six-month ONG term in Scotland.
But I had itchy feet, and I went to work as a sort of rural GP in Canada, in Newfoundland actually. And that was a very interesting experience and I learned a lot. While I was in Canada, I passed a thing called the LMCC. I could have stayed in Canada, but I decided it was way too cold. I worked in Texas for three months.
While I was in Canada, I received my green card or whatever the equivalent is for Australia. And I was able to go to Australia and I decided that I'd like to go to Australia for six months. And that was, um, almost 40 years ago.
When I came to Australia, I worked for a few weeks with a GP deputizing service. And the less said about that, the better, Ryan. I then got a job in St. Margaret's Children's Hospital for six months, and then the government, in its wisdom, decided to close St. Margaret's Children's Hospital in Darlinghurst. And at that time, there was a local GP in Manly who advertised for a locum because he was going on his first holiday in nine years to Greece. I took over as his locum. He went to Greece and unfortunately, he had a stroke and he died in Greece. I suddenly found myself with, his practice in Manly and I built up that general practice so that it was one of the biggest, if not the biggest, in Manly. And I did that for about five or six years.
I wasn't 100 percent satisfied with being a GP because I felt that was a glorified triage for a lot of people. I decided I would like to specialize. And I had been doing some GP obstetrics in Manly. My pathway into spatiality was very unusual. As a GP I passed the part one, which was a bit unusual, and I worked in Royal Prince Alfred for three years, and then the Royal Hospital for Women for three years in my training, and then I’ve done my last year of training in the UK in Essex.
I always intended to come back and work in Manly because I love Manly and I love living in Manly. So, I came back and I did some locum work before I got a job as a VMO at Manly. A VMO stands for visiting medical officer. So, at the very beginning of my career, I'd done some locums in Darwin and Alice Springs in Rockhampton. I then became a VMO in Manly Hospital, and I started in private practice in Manly, and I built up a very, very big, mixed obstetric and gynecology practice in Manly. I did that for at least 25 years.
And because of that, and because I live in Manly, I'm reasonably well known in Manly. I did that until I decided it was time to give up private practice. And I gave my private practice to a colleague and we had a very seamless transition and he's doing extremely well now. I simply just gave him the practice and all the equipment and it gave him a huge leg up for which he seems to be very grateful. I decided… well, I'm retired, but I'm not quite ready to give up yet. So, I decided that I would do some locums again. And that's what started me in a, what I call locum land.
[00:04:33] Ryan Kevelighan: It's a good name for it. Very, very fitting. What year did you give up your private practice?
[00:04:37] Jim Ferry: The end of 2020, 2021,
[00:04:41] Ryan Kevelighan: So relatively, relatively recent then.
[00:04:43] Jim Ferry: I always intended to give up the practice, and Andy was itching to go and I had him working, slowly working him into the practice and working myself out of it. So, the succession planning was quite good. As I say, there was… there was a family tragedy that probably expedited my decision to quit private practice.
[00:05:03] Ryan Kevelighan: It's a very good job that quite a few people like yourself don't fully retire because in certain skill sets, especially like obstetrics, it would be a much different situation if people did actually retire age and not pick up any further work because there's a real gulf of skill set in that area.
We see that time and time again. So, I'm guessing you get very, uh, very well received around Australia when you turn up to provide your services.
[00:05:26] Jim Ferry: Most places I go to, they say, “Thank you for coming. And we're very grateful to have you.” And a lot of them are really delighted to have you. The thing is, it's a shame because I keep thinking it's a shame, they can't put a USB into a port in the side of my head and download that knowledge that I have.
It seems an awful shame just to leave and that knowledge is gone forever. And that's one of the motivating factors for doing locums. I have all this knowledge and experience and it seems an awful shame just to waste it. And that's exactly what you do when you retire, you know what I mean?
[00:06:02] Ryan Kevelighan: Well, it's a great opportunity now in these latter years for yourself when going around the place and sharing that knowledge around. Did you always know that you wanted to be a doctor?
[00:06:10] Jim Ferry: No, of course not. I mean, I was brought up basically in a very rough, slummy area of Glasgow. Well, there was… I'm one of ten kids, and my father was a labourer and frankly speaking, people like us didn't become doctors. That was very unusual. I was brought up in a place called the Gorbals in Glasgow, and…
[00:06:29] Ryan Kevelighan: I'm familiar with the Gorbals.
[00:06:32] Jim Ferry: And for somebody… for somebody like me to become a doctor was strange.
And when I first went to university, I couldn't believe that there were half the kids in the first year of medicine that were from private schools. I had no idea that private schools existed. The funny thing is I felt very, um, out of place my first year in medicine and I gravitated towards the other working-class kids.
And we realized one thing I think, is that we were as bright as these other kids, but we weren't as confident.
[00:07:04] Ryan Kevelighan: Yeah. It's a bit…bit like the imposter syndrome type thing that…
[00:07:07] Jim Ferry: Yeah. But no… at one point I wanted to be a pilot. In fact, I was actually accepted by BOAC at the time. That's how far a long ago it was…
[00:07:15] Ryan Kevelighan: Goodness me.
[00:07:16] Jim Ferry: BOAC is British Overseas Airways Corporation or something. And I was accepted to be a pilot. Of course, when I was younger, I wanted to be a clown in a circus, and I wanted to be a fireman and all the usual things. But now I wanted to kick above my weight, given where I came from. And, uh, my parents, they had no money, but they did unusually at that time, uh, in the circumstances in which I was brought up valued education. And I'd done well at school and looking back I think I'd done it well just to please my parents more than anything else.
And academically I was quite good so, basically, just to see if I could do it. Somehow, we did, you know.
[00:07:56] Ryan Kevelighan: Well, there you go, it's a good job you did and it's a good job you were quite good academically. You mentioned before you moved from the UK across to Canada first, is that right?
[0:08:04] Jim Ferry: Yes.
[0:08:04] Ryan Kevelighan: What… what… what drove you to make that move? Is it the sense of something different, adventure, or some other reason or?
[00:08:10] Jim Ferry: No, I remember my mindset at the time and my mindset was this. Here I am, I've been offered several jobs as a GP in the south side of Glasgow, including the GP practice that my family went to. The principal of that really wanted me to join the practice. But I thought to myself, “Well, am I going to spend the next 40 years of my life in the south side of Glasgow? Or am I going to have an adventure or two before I settle down somewhere?”
And I decided the latter. And I thought, “Well, I'm going to go to Canada. I'll learn stuff. I'll work there and it'll be interesting.” And I ended up as I've already said, working in Canada and working in Texas and starting work in Sydney, Australia.
Yes. And I don't regret that by the way.
[00:08:55] Ryan Kevelighan: Did you notice a significant difference between Canada versus the US versus Australia?
[00:09:01] Jim Ferry: Absolutely! Canada was a socialized medicine that was just coming in in Canada then. First of all, the difference in lifestyle in Canada. I arrived there in the winter. And, uh, I've never known cold like it, especially in Newfoundland and the East Coast. I thought Scotland was cold, but when I got to Canada, that was another level.
I lasted for three months in Texas and decided, “No, I really would like to go to Australia.” Australia was… I enjoyed, I really enjoyed, Sydney. I mean, I arrived in Sydney, I didn't know anybody. I got a one-way ticket from, Toronto, via Las Vegas, via San Francisco, via Hawaii, and via Sydney.
I left a Canadian winter which was about minus 10 degrees and I ended up… I arrived in Sydney and it was 40 degrees and it was quite a difference, yeah.
[00:10:16] Ryan Kevelighan: What was it like transitioning back then? Like… cause it was obviously quite, quite some time ago. You… I'm guessing you probably didn't have an agency. Did they… did you just go door-knocking when you got here? Did you have a connection?
[00:10:25] Jim Ferry: I forget exactly how I got the, uh, GP deputizing thing. There was no internet in those days.
[00:10:32] Ryan Kevelighan: No, of course.
[00:10:33] Jim Ferry: I think there was a magazine and I just wrote to them. It was snail mail essentially.
[00:10:38] Ryan Kevelighan: Yeah, yeah.
[00:10:38] Jim Ferry: It was normal mail believe it or not in those days. See, the thing is, I was young then, and everything was an adventure.
So, I didn't think of the downside. I arrived with a suitcase and, please don't laugh, but it was full of medical books, and they were really heavy. People don't do books anymore, but my suitcase was full of medical books.
[00:10:58] Ryan Kevelighan: Well, you say that, but we still have locums that go out and we have to get them extra baggage so they can take their, uh, their, their study books with them.
[00:11:06] Jim Ferry: Yeah, I mean, like, I find that odd now. I mean, one thing I have found as a locum is that I've had to get more IT savvy because you have to upload and download so many credentials. But that's getting off the track. I arrived and I worked as a deputizing GP, but as I say, it was only a stopgap. I arrived in Sydney and I literally hadn't anywhere to stay and I asked the taxi driver, where the best place in Sydney to stay was and he said Kings Cross.
[00:11:36] Ryan Kevelighan: That would have been interesting back in those days.
[00:11:37] Jim Ferry: So, the first three weeks of my time in Sydney, I stayed in Kings Cross. But the reason I ended up at Manly was, um, I used to go all over Sydney with this deputizing GP service. And one day, our patch was the Northern Beaches. And I'm talking about from Dee Why to Manly. I thought, if I'm going to stay in Sydney, this is where I'm going to live because I really love the Northern Beaches. And that's exactly where I did live at.
Again, you'd look at the Sydney Morning Herald, and you would find, uh, you know, advertisements for sharing apartments. And I went… I sort of applied to the Manly ones, and there was a Glaswegian flight attendant who worked for Qantas and I applied there, and we got on really well.
And so, I started sharing an apartment with him in Fairlight, which is next to Manly, which is probably why I ended up getting that GP locum in Manly. So that explains, in a very shortened version how I ended up in Manly.
[00:12:41] Ryan Kevelighan: It's a very different world these days. I'm, I'm old enough to remember just the back end of people applying to adverts in papers and magazines and stuff like that, at the same time, the internet was coming in at the front end. For people younger than me listening, you know, it's, it's quite a hard thing to imagine not being able to just go online and select finding somewhere to live and then viewing pictures online and having a look at an interactive map and all this type of stuff when they… when they move over. You know, it's a, it's a different, different times, different world.
[00:13:06] Jim Ferry: Well, I mean, you just didn't jump on the internet and back in the day, there was no internet,
[00:13:11] Ryan Kevelighan: Yeah, none of course.
[00:13:11] Jim Ferry: There was no email
[00:13:12] Ryan Kevelighan: I remember the back end of those days well. So you had your career in Manly. I'm not sure how much you want to touch on it, but I mean, you, you, took over, the practice and built it to be even more so successful, etc., over a number of years. Did you do any extra work outside of that, in that 25-year period? Or were you dedicated to just working in Manly and that's what your, your entire focus was?
[00:13:32] Jim Ferry: In my practice in Manly, in my O&G practice in Manly, um, no, I, I dedicated myself totally to the practice. When you're a private obstetrician you have to dedicate yourself because you're essentially on all the time. You can't, for instance, unless you've got somebody to cover you, you have a beer even, even one beer I reckon, because if you had to go in for a delivery and you smelled of alcohol, it's not a good look.
And so essentially, I barely drank for 25 years. I still don't much because you just can't… you're on all the time. Essentially people don't realize this as a private obstetrician. I mean, I did gynecology as well, and I did a lot of gynecology, but, the… the other thing about working in Manly and working in the Royal North Shore is you've got a lot of very good colleagues to call on. And so, I built up a network of friends, surgeons who, for difficult cases, would come and help.
And so, it was a very satisfying practice. As I say, I can walk around Manly now, and I've delivered half the population in Manly. And it's a nice feeling, because I'm sort of out of it, but I've still got a legacy and I find that very nice. To be honest, I took lots of holidays, because it's the only way you can really survive in private practice as a private obstetrician. It's a very big commitment to be a private obstetrician. It's not like being a private dermatologist. I've no apologies to dermatologists, but it's not the same.
[00:15:01] Ryan Kevelighan: No, it is a whole different level, isn't it, in terms of just the interaction with the patient. Because if they have you as their, your obstetrician, their obstetrician, sorry, you know, there's, there's an expectation that you are gonna be the person that does the, uh, the final part of the process.
[00:15:13] Jim Ferry: Well, it's a very big deal for a woman to get a private obstetrician.
[00:15:15] Ryan Kevelighan: Of course, yeah.
[00:15:16] Jim Ferry: And when I meet women in the street or in the supermarket or whatever, the fact that you've been there for the most important moment of their life, it's a big deal.
[00:15:26] Ryan Kevelighan: Yeah. No, of course.
[00:15:27] Jim Ferry: Even if it was a normal delivery, for them it's not necessarily a normal delivery. The main thing when you're in private practice, you build up the trust of women and, when they're in labour and when you come walking into the labour ward, when they're about to have the baby, the look of relief in their face, because you've built up a relationship with them and this is very important this relationship. This trust is very, very important and it may even only be a normal delivery or even a routine caesar, but to them it's anything but routine. For you it's routine, for them it's not. And if you have to do an emergency caesar, and you can stay calm, and you do it because you do it all the time, they never ever forget that, ever. And it's a lovely relationship you have with people, and private practice has its rewards, to be honest.
[00:16:15] Ryan Kevelighan: I'm sure it's the same for yourself, but I've spoken to other obstetricians in the past that have delivered up to three generations in the same family and that type of thing, which is, it just shows that ongoing legacy and commitment being dedicated in the local area and, having the same family come back to you as the trusted obstetrician.
[00:16:30] Jim Ferry: It's a bit like the old-fashioned GP used to be, you know?
[00:16:34] Ryan Kevelighan: Yeah. You'd always go to the same GP back in the day in your local village.
[00:16:37] Jim Ferry: Yeah. I mean, they don't exist anymore, but I was a solo GP before I became an obstetrician, and it was the same deal. People got to trust you, and a lot of people were devastated when I said I was leaving general practice because you're actually an important person in their life. That's a privilege that you don't take lightly.
[00:16:56] Ryan Kevelighan: We see it all the time as well. Rural GPs, especially, you know, they've… they were, they were such an integral part of the community and in many cases they've been there for many years. So, when there is a, you know, a time for them to move on or retire or whatever the circumstances might be, it can be really unsettling for the community, especially if they can't get some form of equitable, reasonable replacement, et cetera. It's just a… it can cause all sorts of problems.
[00:17:19] Jim Ferry: The problem is when you work in a small place and you're a GP and you know everybody's secrets, and then you have to live with them and socialize, it's almost like a dual role you're playing, you know?
[00:17:30] Ryan Kevelighan: It's like being a barman or a priest, you know?
[00:17:32] Jim Ferry: Yes, exactly.
[00:17:33] Ryan Kevelighan: You know a bit of everyone's business, you know. So, in recent years then, you've taken on some extra locum work and then you've, you've retired away from Manly and started to do a bit more locum work. I mean, what are you experiencing about that? In doing this, at this stage in your career, are you finding it different in the early days of your career when you did some part of it? Is it giving you a fresh sense of a bit more of adventure, etc., getting back out and about and that type of thing?
[00:17:56] Jim Ferry: The first thing I'll say is my experience as a private obstetrician-gynecologist in Manly didn't truly prepare me for being a locum in some of the places I have been. It absolutely didn't. When I go to various places, I say to them, look, you know, and I'm quite honest, I'm sure my private practice in Manly didn't prepare me.
I used to think that that represented a cross-section of Australia, my practice in Manly. I couldn't have been more wrong. I was working in a bubble within a bubble. I call, I was working in a Vanilla Land, and people understand that. If you go from an upper-middle-class practice in Manly and you suddenly find yourself in Derby with the indigenous people, it's truly very, very different indeed. It's like another planet, you know?
[00:18:47] Ryan Kevelighan: Manly must be a bubble within a bubble if it made a chat from the Gorbals and not realized.
[00:18:51] Jim Ferry: And it's just I never had to think about it. I realized that, uh, Manly is not Australia. It's, it's nothing like normal Australia. And I have worked though, um, in the last few years in Darwin and Alice Springs, and in many places, Port Macquarie and Kempsey and Moruya and Bowral and Shoalhaven and Grafton and Mildura, Bendigo, and in WA. I worked in Port Hedland, Derby, Fiona Stanley and Esperance.
So, I think I can honestly say I've got a good all-round view of locum lands in Australia.
[00:19:27] Ryan Kevelighan: Yeah, well, there's a, there's a big, broad, differences there with those places you just listed, because as you say, you've been to numerous places and they're in very different locations. Some of them are more metropolitan, some of them are very remote, some of them are in warmer climates, some of them in cooler climates.
So, there's a, there's a big difference there in terms of the experiences that you'll have had. What are your thoughts on the different cultures as you go around the place and how it makes a change on the experience for potentially both sides, both parties, both you as the doctor and the hospital staff and patients?
[00:19:57] Jim Ferry: Well, as I said, most of the hospital staff are very welcoming and most of them say “Thank you.” A lot of them say “Thank you for coming” most of them, they’re used to locums and, very few of them actually seem to resent locums. They seem to love locums and places like this really need locums because even if not a lot happens in the smaller places, when it doesn't happen, you really, really need to be there.
What you have to suss out very quickly is the culture of a place and you have to ingratiate yourself very quickly and be likable very quickly basically become friendly and let people know that you are friendly. You are… you wish to be helpful, you, you're very approachable. And that might seem very obvious to say, but the stories I hear about some locums who are quite aloof, and are not contactable, and some of them can be lazy, you know? And you've just got to send a message out to people that you're glad to be there. You're delighted to be there. You want to help and make yourself likable and speak to some key people right away. And by that, I mean, the head of theater, midwifery staff, the chief medical officer, the local surgeon. and the local anesthetists, because these are people who you will need and your relationship with them is actually very important.
[00:21:18] Ryan Kevelighan: Yeah, some very good advice. I think it's the way people should approach life in all aspects anyway if they can be, go in friendly and open. And, uh…
[00:21:25] Jim Ferry: Well, you must be friendly. You must be open. You must be seem to be approachable and likable and helpful. If somebody says, “Do you mind doing this?” I'll say, “I'll do my best. Thank you.” And the other thing, by the way is be honest about what your limitations are as well.
[00:21:39] Ryan Kevelighan: That's a very important one because you end up with people working in situations where they may or may not feel comfortable, which can then have ramifications.
[00:21:46] Jim Ferry: Absolutely. And I'm, I'm quite comfortable with saying “No, I'm sorry,” but I'm not happy. I remember going to one place and this is just a small example but they had an operating list for me and I was supposed to turn up and do this operating list and it was an operation with which I was not familiar and not only was I not familiar with this operation, I hadn't even met the patient. I insisted meeting the patient and the patient duly turned up at the clinic, and it was a makeshift clinic because they didn't actually have a clinic because the local doctor had been seeing everybody in his own rooms.
And this is part of the example I'm saying about. You've got to get to know the local culture and the local facilities. And this woman, when I examined this person she insisted in the operation and I felt that, A, I didn't feel that that was appropriate and, I wasn't comfortable doing the procedure anyway. And she got very, very upset but I felt that I was doing the right thing and I did the right thing. But you get… you get issues like that where people's expectations or the institution's expectations of you are more than you can offer.
That's very rare by the way. Very, very rare, but it does occasionally happen. But be honest about your, um, limitations too. That's all I can say.
[00:23:04] Ryan Kevelighan: Yeah, I know indeed. We have very frank and honest opinion conversations with people on our side of the fence as well. And we really try and vet people into making sure that they don't end up in a position that they're not going to be comfortable with. And usually escalates to the point where we try our utmost to get the locum doctor on the phone to another doctor at the facility that they're planning on going to so that there can be a doctor-to-doctor conversation.
So instead of having, what is fundamentally a salesperson, try and regurgitate what they think is, uh, is the reality for the doctor.
[00:23:35] Jim Ferry: Well, it's, it's very interesting. Um, one aspect is, escalation of care, and especially in a small place, you have to very quickly learn who the… who you escalate care to, and quite often you have to phone up and ask advice from doctors at major metropolitan centers. And quite often you have to make the decision, about getting somebody out.
And the issue I have had in some instances is I have procrastinated about sending somebody out, and I have regretted that. If in doubt, get them out especially with the Royal Flying Doctor Service in remote areas, because they can take a long time. Don't be scared to escalate and if you're not totally comfortable with the situation, especially in obstetrics, somebody who is premature, and who you think may be going into labour, don't wait until they go into labour. Get them out.
The worst that can happen is that they end up, going, sitting in a metropolitan hospital for a few days and they get flown back. It's very important to, know how quickly to escalate and the facilities of a place. And I have learned that the hard way.
There's one case actually, looking back I should have sent her away the night that she came in. I won't go into the details of it, but, I thought, “No, I can do this.” But, uh, I…I was thinking purely of my own abilities. I wasn't thinking of the backup available, or rather the lack of backup available.
And the next morning, I spoke to the CEO, and he had a wry smile on his face and says, “Well, James, you know what you should have done last night?” And I said, “Yes, I do.” And you learn. You never stop learning, by the way. and I always say to my junior staff, especially in the big metropolitan areas, I say to them, and with total honesty, you know what, I learn more in a day than you guys do.
I'm still learning. I learn every day. Being a locum and especially in different places, you learn stuff every single day.
[00:25:29] Ryan Kevelighan: Would you say that's your favourite part about locum, Jim? You know, that you get to keep on learning every day and new experiences?
[00:25:35] Jim Ferry: Yes. and to be honest, the fact that you're useful is a very big part of it for me. Being useful, being needed, doing things that to you as a consultant are simple, but to the other people is not, is a big deal. And also, some places I work with GP obstetricians, some places I work with registrars and residents, and taking them through a Caesar or taking them through an instrumental delivery, or even a laparoscopy, they're very grateful, and I really got a kick out of being helpful.
It's very, very important for a locum to impart any knowledge he or she has, as much as they can. And I enjoy that. The other thing is, um, the staff, especially in the smaller places, but even in the bigger places, truly appreciate the fact that you're willing to teach and you're willing to, sit down and talk about things.
It's very important that you're useful that way. Very important indeed. And quite often I'll get the opportunity, I will give little talks and various things, and it's always appreciated and I enjoy it.
[00:26:39] Ryan Kevelighan: Yeah, well, it gives you a real sense of purpose, I'm guessing, as well. It's sort of because you’re getting the rewarding feeling of the outcomes of what you're doing and you can see in live time as well. We come back on some of the good things as well, what do you not like about locum, Jim?
[00:26:51] Jim Ferry: Well, basically, I live on the Waterfront Manly and if it's a beautiful day and I'm about to leave, I say, “Why am I doing this?” Because I really feel like an nice swim in that lovely blue azure water, you know? Sometimes you miss certain family things. Sometimes, to be honest, it's like, you really just can't be bothered going, if that's the truth, you know what I mean?
Sometimes you just would rather just…. because I enjoy just sitting around and walking around Manly. I've got plenty of friends here. Being away, especially for family things can be difficult, although, I will qualify that by saying that as a locum you can pick and choose your dates. So, I can't dwell on that aspect too much.
I don't like to travel very much. I don't like sitting and waiting around airports very much. To be honest, the main aspect is the first day because you've got to get up. You've got to pack. You've got to travel and then you get there and you've got to pick up the car get into your accommodation and then you've got to find somewhere to go to eat or get some groceries and cook.
So, the first day is quite hectic. And of course, you don't get paid for that, but that's all right. So, I guess it's a travel time. The thing is I've been offered plenty of short-term locums, at attractive rates for four, say, or five days, but in actual fact, it's not four or five days. That's actually seven days because it's a day there and a day back. You've got to remember that.
[00:28:24] Ryan Kevelighan: When I first started doing this, um, quite a few years ago now, there was a lot of talk about travel day pays, and I think it was when some of the rates used to be lower in the market. They used to be… it was more common that travel days were put in, or half a day there, half a day back and that type of thing.
But then those seem to disappear from the market over, over the following years after getting into this. And, uh, I think that the rates increased somewhat and then, uh, and then they sort of washed that through. But, uh, you're right with the travel, like if anyone's ever experienced traveling quite a lot, initially it's a bit exciting, can be a bit glamorous sometimes, etc. and feel a bit, you know, something different. But once you do the same thing more than a few times, it can become quite tedious.
[00:29:02] Jim Ferry: The other thing is, of course, things go wrong. Like you can turn up, and there's no baggage allowance. You have to pay for your baggage, or turned up at the hired car, and there’s a $6,000 excess, and you've got to pay a fortune for that. Or a couple of times I've turned up to pick up the car and I've had to pay for the car myself. It was refunded.
Or a couple of times, they forgot to, uh, book my accommodation. Not your agency, I might add, but you know, things like that. I've actually turned up at hospital accommodation and there was somebody in the accommodation I was supposed to be staying in. So, there's all that.
But to answer your question, what I don't like about locums, apart from that, from the medical aspect, what I don't like about going to, uh, especially new places, you've got to learn. It's a nightmare. Sometimes the medical information system, the new IT system, and you've got to basically get into the culture right away. Find out where everything is and it can be quite unsettling for the first couple of days.
Finding out what the roster is, how things work, where you're supposed to be, how busy it is, who the key people are. It really can be quite unsettling for the first couple of days.
[00:30:17] Ryan Kevelighan: Did you find that some places give you a good induction when you get on-site, or?
[00:30:23] Jim Ferry: Very few places give a decent induction. I have literally turned up at a place once and they said, “Oh, you're the new obstetrician. There's an emergency caesar in theatre. Could you go there right away?” I had to say, “Well, okay, first theatre, could you let me in please?” Cause I didn't… hadn't even picked up my swipe card.
Find out where you change. Walk into theatre. A bunch of strangers with a big smile saying, “Hi, I'm Jim Ferry. I'm the obstetrician and there's a patient there waiting for an emergency caesar.” You don't know her from a bar of soap. That has happened. So, to be honest, I'm not saying that that's common. In my experience, very, very few locums have the luxury of even an hour's orientation.
[00:31:06] Ryan Kevelighan: Yeah, I think it's a reflection on the challenges in the wider healthcare sector, you know, it's just everybody's under such level of pressure, staffing shortages. There's always in some form of semi-crisis it feels. So, it's probably a reflection on that, but I think quite a lot of places do very well based on the circumstances that they're in, but we, we, as an agency are trying our best to improve it.
So, we're, constantly talking to clients these days about the inductions that are being conducted and trying to make sure that they are being inducted and also try and help improve them. With some of them that they're doing, whether we can help and get some of the information out to them in advance, we try that as well.
It is funny you mentioned though, the travel and accommodation and the flights and the car hires and all that, I think that is one of the biggest challenges from an agency point of view as well. Finding doctors is difficult, getting them into the right job is difficult, but then getting them there, getting them the right car flight, and then making it all work and accommodation is another, fun and merry-go-round on its own.
[00:31:57] Jim Ferry: Well, that in itself can be stressful, especially when it doesn't go right. I mean, you know, I mean, I've, I've arrived at airports where the car hire, Avis, Europcar, there's nobody there, you know. And it can be quite confounding. I find there’s a lot of locum agencies outsourced it to another travel agency. Sometimes you go with Jetstar. Sometimes you go with Qantas. It can be quite confusing, the whole thing.
But again, I'm not making a big deal about that. I mean, on the whole, you usually end up getting there. As I say, the other thing I'd like to talk about is, and it’s nothing to do with you, is every state, and even within states, there's a totally different medical information system. It astounds me that there's not one uniform system throughout Australia.
In WA, there's a different system from South Australia, which is totally different from Victoria, which is totally different from New South Wales. None of them talk to each other. I will work, where it's a very itinerant population. And somebody will have had an operation somewhere.
And do you think that we can look that up in My Health Record or any? No. It's just not available. I can't for the life of me, figure out why they didn't have a uniform IT medical information system, for Australia. I mean, it is one country.
And these things can be quite difficult to navigate, especially if you, for instance, that caesar that I'd done, um, the second I arrived there, I then had to figure out, and it was quite complex how to do an electronic record of the operation. And this is very, very medically, legally important. And I had to, sort of, try and figure out. And it was a small place so there was no juniors to help me. I had to try and figure out how to navigate sort of a computerized medical record of the operation. This is where you can get into trouble because, um, you don't record everything as you should be doing. And this is part of the process or lack of process of induction.
[00:34:01] Ryan Kevelighan: Yeah, stuff does stem on… from that about the computer systems are a challenge as well in just trying to get people access into them. It's interesting you mentioned about there being a different system in all the different states and territories because we have had a national medical board now for 14 years.
You would have thought that it might have progressed to a national computer system. But, uh, but again, that's a little bit out of my lane that is to be honest with you that side of things.
[00:34:24] Jim Ferry: Actually, if you speak to most locums, especially if they go to a new place in a new state, you've really got… it takes a couple of days even for the smartest guy, they just get the hang of it, you know?
For instance, there's actually, you've got to have about six different apps open. You've got an app for, you know, seeing patients and, doing progress notes. But you've got an app for, um, the medical imaging. You've got an app for e-referral. You've got an app for results. You've got another app for booking. And, I mean, it… I don't know who designed these medical information systems. It was certainly… all I can say is it certainly I wasn't a working doctor.
[00:35:01] Ryan Kevelighan: I know, indeed. So, look, going back onto the agency side of things then, what would you tell people to expect from a locum agency?
[00:35:09] Jim Ferry: First of all, be friendly and be accessible. You should get the impression from your locum agency that they want to make it as smooth as possible. You've got to explain to them that when you first join an agency, they're going to have to ask you for a tsunami of credentials, probably about 10 to 15 different credentials.
But once that's done, it's done. And then you've got to give them a CV of course, and you've got to have references. But credentialing and the compliance can be quite challenging especially if you're not used to it and I wasn't used to it at first. And that's what stops people changing so much from agency to agency, because there's so much paperwork.
[00:35:53] Ryan Kevelighan: Yeah, you wouldn’t have experienced much of it while you were in your private practice world, would you? Because it…
[00:35:57] Jim Ferry: I experienced none of it, you know.
[00:35:59] Ryan Kevelighan: Yeah. And then this is… this is some of the challenge we get is when you've got senior people who've never experienced it before. I am positive about the paperwork process in totality because it's important for everyone's safety. But at the same time, it is a… it is a big process to get it done once. And that's one of the biggest benefits of an agency often is the… the assistance with that.
[00:36:17] Jim Ferry: Well, you have to be a bit IT savvy, I mean as I say, by the way, most of the locums that I see, not all of them, but most of the locums I see are either overseas medical graduates or transitioning to retirement fellows. That would make up a big chunk of locums, and there's a lot of transitioning to retirement fellows, and that means they're of a certain age where they're not super IT comfortable or IT savvy.
But you have to become that because you have to upload and download lots of different documents and, have the email for the current health board and, you, you, you cannot do this job without a laptop.
[00:36:56] Ryan Kevelighan: No, I'd agree. Say, you have to be at certain level of competence, IT Savvy. We've had a few people we've helped in the past and assisted them. I supposed it's another reason why we… we actually ended up making a platform. I don't know whether you've used it yet or not, called Health Pass, and we've tried to make it as user-friendly as possible. It's digitalized the entire end-to-end credentialing process to the point of everything that could be digitalized, but it's through what we hope is being seen as a user-friendly, uh, platform.
[00:37:24] Jim Ferry: One question I always ask, they ask for references, and that's fine, and I've got plenty of people who give references, but I always say, “How long are you going to take?” Because I always make sure that they don't hit the poor doctor who I say is going to give my reference with a, a huge, massive, long list of, computerized list of, uh, that's going to take him 15 minutes or so.
I say, “Just please phone this person up” and ask them a question and don't take more than five minutes of their time. It doesn't take any more than five minutes for somebody to see if you're any good or not, you know.
[00:37:59] Ryan Kevelighan: Unfortunately, the hospitals in the system make us get standard formats for these things, but we've come up with methods to make it short and sweet. So, which again, again, another thing that we're up to behind the scenes, but, uh…
[00:38:10] Jim Ferry: One thing I find about hospitals is most hospitals, they'll get stuck in one little aspect. It might be a module, or it might be, um, working with children, it might be… but they'll get stuck in one little aspect. And they'll be very adamant about having that whether it's useful or not. For instance, they insist on FSEP3 and PROMPT and neonatal resuscitation.
Other places just don't worry about that at all, but they'll worry about a special IT module or have you done the fire safety module. So, it's strange how the various places get stuck on various small issues. None of which have any relationship to any of the others, you know? And you just have to wear that, you know? You just have to get used to that.
[00:38:59] Ryan Kevelighan: There's a standardized sort of bare minimum credentialing benchmark across the country and then all the different locations then start putting the extra levels of credentialing on top of it. And you're right, it does differ. It differs on a state by state, district by district.
[00:39:12] Jim Ferry: The thing is that working with children…I can't understand why working with children has to be, can't be a national thing. Each state has its own working with children parameters.
[00:39:23] Ryan Kevelighan: We've actually been pushing for that and trying to lobby for that for years now. Eight states and territories all differ. But there's some complications in it, as you know,
So, I think one of the things we spoke about when we were having a quick chat prior to this was just about how big Australia is. You know, for example, like WA is, what is it, 13 times the size of the UK? I can't remember. It creates different challenges that I think your average person who's, for example, a UK or Irish graduate who's come over here, who's maybe been in Australia for a year and hasn't seen the sights.
[00:39:52] Jim Ferry: First of all, WA rural health…in fact, WA metropolitan health would not survive without overseas doctors and especially Irish doctors. I just want to make that statement. The other thing I want to make before I answer, and you can ask that question again, is surely with an international medical graduate who's desperate to come to Australia, and most of them are, why don't they make it compulsory that they must work in rural areas for five years? I do not understand. That would solve a lot of problems.
[00:40:23] Ryan Kevelighan: They technically do through the Medicare, system for GPs, but then you've got the issue with the junior, more junior doctors going out to the rural areas where they don't have the supervision level requirements to meet them. So, they don't have the ability to supervise in some of these areas in any volume. So that's what keeps that particular piece, I believe, a bit of an issue.
[00:40:43] Jim Ferry: That seems to me on my travels. I have met very, very many overseas doctors, most of whom, I must say are very, very excellent, very lovely people, and we're lucky to have them.
With regard to the question… I'm sorry for diverging there, but with regard to your question about how big, WA is, well, WA is the size of Western Europe. But it's only a population of about two and a half million or three million. And there's a lot of very, very remote communities, which make them exceptionally expensive to service. It's compounded by the fact that a lot of the remote communities are indigenous and they have got major health issues. I'm astounded by the health issues.
And these poor people, they're living in very remote communities. The issue is that getting health access for these people is very, very difficult. I naively thought before I'd done Locums at the Royal Flying Doctor Service was some romantic thing with about three planes. It's actually a multi-billion-dollar business or enterprise and it's got about 80 or 90 planes and they're always busy.
The health system would collapse without the Royal Flying Doctor Service. And it's a very, very essential part of the whole system. And as I said, it would fall apart without them. And it's very expensive too, I would add.
[00:42:13] Ryan Kevelighan: I can imagine there's nothing… there's nothing cheap anyway in the system and certainly not flying planes around with, uh, with medical practitioners on it and one of Australia's biggest beauties is the country and the geography of it. But again, it's one of its biggest issues is just the tyranny of distance in every angle.
[00:42:28] Jim Ferry: Most of these places don't have an MRI, for instance.
[00:42:30] Ryan Kevelighan: Yeah.
[00:42:31] Jim Ferry: And so they have to be flown just to have an MRI. People in the city don't realize how lucky they are compared with people who live remotely. And as you say, by remotely, it doesn't have to be that remote.
[00:42:43] Ryan Kevelighan: No, not at all. And that should be not too far away from places. Well look, we've spoken quite a bit about your locum life and your previous career and stuff like that which has been very interesting. I mean, you've also got quite an interesting non-medical life. I mean, would you like to mention anything about telling… one of the things I get involved in conversations with doctors quite a bit about sometimes is about business interests and other sources of income outside of medicine to sort of have a… have a back full position for when the day comes that they might not wish to be in medicine and whatever that might look like. Is that something that you've, you've been involved with yourself?
[00:43:15] Jim Ferry: I think it's important, and… and most doctors have outside interests, at least I would hope so. Well obviously, there was my family, which is very important, and they still are of course. You say what do I miss out on by being a locum? Well, I have almost a daily coffee with one of my sons, Christian. And I miss that a lot when I go and do locum work to be quite honest with you. I miss just that daily chat with Christian. Uh, I speak to him on the phone but it's not quite the same thing.
Anyhow, to get back to other interests, yes, I actually in my earlier career as a GP, I played state league soccer.
[00:43:54] Ryan Kevelighan: Okay.
[00:43:55] Jim Ferry: And that's very important. By the way, again, I'm going to digress. I think that to be the best you can be as a doctor, especially in a stressful situation, like, uh, being a locum is, I think it's important to be physically fit. Now, you might think, what's that got to do with locuming? I think it has everything to do with locuming.
If you're physically fit, then it helps you emotionally and psychologically deal with the stresses of turning up to a place where nobody knows you and being expected to provide specialist services. And being physically fit is very, very important. I exercise for at least an hour a day. I do that as much for my head as my body. One of the reasons I do that is to make me a better doctor. You might think that's a long bow but it's actually not. And it's very, very important to be physically fit and it helps you cope with the stress of this job.
[00:44:52] Ryan Kevelighan: Yeah, there's a lot of connection between the two in, in all different types of careers. But I was going to say you…when you exercise daily, are you… are you swimming out the front?
[00:44:59] Jim Ferry: I'm swimming out the front. People say I shouldn't because the harbour you can be eaten by a shark, but…
[00:45:03] Ryan Kevelighan: You risk that every day, do you?
[00:45:05] Jim Ferry: I risk that every day. The first thing I do when I go to a place is find out where the nearest running track is or where the nearest pool is. And I make that a point of finding out where I can go at least for running.
[00:45:17] Ryan Kevelighan: You’d be a lot safer on the running track than you would in the water outside, the beautiful azure water outside the front there?
[00:45:23] Jim Ferry: Yeah, well, not many people swim in the harbour, but…
[00:45:26] Ryan Kevelighan: Yeah.
[00:45:27] Jim Ferry: I’ll take my chances right.
[00:45:28] Ryan Kevelighan: No, no, I'm touching wood. I'm touching wood there. That would give you some good luck. Any other final comments, advice, or anything you'd like to pass on? Any pearls of wisdom or…?
[00:45:36] Jim Ferry: Well, first of all, you asked me about, um, I get into developing. So, I've had a parallel career in developing. I've done some developing. And I own Level 5 where my colleague who is now running my practice works. And there's also an IVF clinic there, a pathology clinic, and some other specialists as well. So that's a source of income.
[00:45:58] Ryan Kevelighan: Yeah.
[00:45:59] Jim Ferry: I also… I'm the landlord of the original 4 Pines microbrewery in Manly.
[00:46:06] Ryan Kevelighan: Ah, yes. I forgot about this.
[00:46:07] Jim Ferry: That's a handy source of income. Plus, I like the idea that I own a piece of Manly's heritage because it is a bit of Manly's heritage. It's the original 4 Pines microbrewery. I also have a barber shop where my son works. So, I've got a lot of little business interests like that.
So, to be honest I don't have to work but I choose to work. The reason I choose to work… one of the reasons is it's good to be useful, and I just don't like any sort of waste. And to be honest, if I retire, all this knowledge that's in this little head of mine will be wasted. And to me, that's not quite right.
[00:46:44] Ryan Kevelighan: On that note, what do you see the next few years looking like? I know you mentioned you were going to have a holiday middle of this year and whatnot, but do you see yourself, um, still doing this locum work out in the field for the coming next few years and…?
[00:46:54] Jim Ferry: Well, for the next year or two year, I keep saying to people, I'm one bad… really, I mean in obstetrics, things can go very bad very quickly. I'm one horrible case away from retiring. That's one thing that stresses me out is, if you get a really horrible case, and believe me, they happen in obstetrics, your ability to cope with really horrible cases is not… as you get older, you just don't really want to be involved in any nasty cases anymore.
And an obstetrician she can't plan everything, especially not these. And the other thing is when you're working, say, in a remote area and something bad happens, there's nobody around to counsel you. They don't have psychologists out there. They don't have anybody out there who can help. So as long as things go well, I will continue to do it.
[00:47:44] Ryan Kevelighan: Good. It's… it's… as I keep saying throughout this, it's… it's great that there are people like you out there because in certain skill sets, especially obstetrics, you know, there's a… there's a real shortage of people that are abled in a position to do this type of work.
[00:47:56] Jim Ferry: Sometimes you develop a bit of the imposter syndrome. But I think most people if they're honest with themselves, they have that. What I do realize, especially working in, even in bigger places, is how much you've accumulated, how much knowledge you've actually accumulated over the decades. You tend to underestimate that but it's actually quite a lot. That all comes to the fore sometimes. Especially when things aren't going right or it's a difficult case, you tend not to panic.
I want to make one other point is, um, you spoke to me about, some places they grudge paying locum money or locum fees. They think it's too much.
[00:48:34] Ryan Kevelighan: Yeah.
[00:48:35] Jim Ferry: And I just want to make the point very clearly that the cost of not having a locum in many of these places far, far outweighs by a factor of 10 or even the hundreds far, far outweighs the cost of having a locum. Most places I go to, and I can think of a few examples where I have prevented a disaster simply by being there.
I'm talking about somebody who's got a severe ectopic pregnancy or sometimes whose head is stuck or sometimes, um, a severe postpartum hemorrhage and I'm the only person capable of dealing with that, these are potentially fetal deaths or even maternal deaths. And you only have to prevent one of them a year. And that has made the presence of a locum worthwhile.
I remember once. There was no obstetrician for two days which meant that anybody who was having a baby had to be flown which cost an absolute fortune. It cost ten times the amount a locum would have cost. And then the amount of, um, times that have saved the situation, which would have had severe medical-legal implications for the health board involved. The legal ramifications of me not being there wouldn't have saved them ten times the cost of a locum. I'm talking about hundreds if not thousands the cost of a locum. It's much, much more expensive not to have a locum than to have a locum, because sooner or later, something bad will happen and you will be very, very pleased that you've had a locum.
Many places I have worked, nothing much happens for a couple of days. But believe me, when there's a drama, it is a drama, and in obstetrics, it usually is a drama, and you must be there, you must be there, and the fact that you are there probably saved the local health authority a very, very great deal of money.
[00:50:31] Ryan Kevelighan: I couldn't agree with you more. We see it time and time again, the knock-on effect of there not being doctors in place and closing.
[00:50:37] Jim Ferry: I think it's a false economy, Ryan, not to have a locum,
[00:50:40] Ryan Kevelighan: I think in fairness to sort of reflect on the comment that I made to yourself, it’s not that everywhere feels like that. It's just that the general sentiment is that people always want permanent doctors. They don't want to be spending money on locums. It's probably a bit different out in the rurals and the more remote locations of the country.
But again, there's multiple different issues here at play because you've got different fields of medicine. Some are very locum heavy, some are less locum heavy. So. it's hard to put one sort of sentence across it. But, uh, overall, as we know, many, many, many places are very grateful for the service that gets conducted by the doctors and also even the locum agencies, It's just again, we're the first ones in the firing lines when there's any, grumbles coming back in the other direction.
[00:51:21] Jim Ferry: I'll say one thing that to be a good locum, it's not enough to be competent. Your personality is very important as well. As I said, you have to immediately almost ingratiate yourself with the local area and the local place and be kind, be helpful, be nice, and be a part of the team immediately.
And some people, the psychological makeup just isn't up to that. I have replaced many locums, and the comments made about the locums. And it's always, it's not usually to do with competence, it's usually to do with personality.
I once heard somebody say that locums are either mercenaries, misfits, or, um, missionaries. I totally disagree with that, of course. Most locums I see are actually overseas medical graduates trying to find their feet or transitioning to retirement guys like me.
[00:52:13] Ryan Kevelighan: And that's the thing. It's like anything. It only takes one or two bad stories or bad experiences, and then it creates a perception that there's much more of a bad going on when in reality, the majority of everything that's happening is actually very good, very positive. Dealing with people, Jim, it's like the old saying goes, there's nowt so queer as folk.
[00:52:30] Jim Ferry: Yeah, but the thing is, you know that you're popular or they like you because…
[00:52:35] Ryan Kevelighan: You get us back.
[00:52:36] Jim Ferry: They’ll say, “We like you and we want you to come back.” I mean, like, and most places they want me to come back. In fact, a lot of places offer me the job and they're very grateful and they would love you to come back.
And to be honest, that… that's a good feeling when they say, “We like you. And we would like you to come back,” you know. Call me a sucker, but I like when people say that, you know, it means that I've been useful. Those comments are as much about my persona as they are about my competence. So, I'll say it again, your personality as a locum is just as important as your competence.
[00:53:12] Ryan Kevelighan: Yeah, no, I think very, very valid comment and not just applying to doctors, applying to… applying to everyone.
[00:53:18] Jim Ferry: But in obstetrics, things can go bad very, very quickly, and somebody can have a severe bleed very, very quickly and you have to have somebody there. It can be quite scary at times. I… I really have to say that, it can be quite scary and it can be quite a lonely place at times,
[00:53:32] Ryan Kevelighan: Thank you, Jim very much for your time for the last, you know, hour or so. Hopefully, been enjoyable experience for yourself and I'm sure it will bring a lot of insight into a lot of people who may also being experienced locum and… and just like hearing the war stories as well, or whether it's a junior doctor that's not locum yet and wants to hear it from somebody who's, uh, experienced in many different places in multiple different countries.
So, uh, overall, very interesting and thanks again for your time, Jim. So, uh, we… we look forward to hopefully having you out and about and servicing in-need spots of Australia for the foreseeable future.
[00:54:05] Jim Ferry: Thank you, Ryan. As I say locuming isn't for everybody, but it can be quite rewarding, be it temporary or permanent. I look forward to doing it for the near future at least. So, thank you again, Ryan.
[00:54:16] Ryan Kevelighan: Much appreciate it, Jim. All the best.