Founder and chief executive of Emergency Consult Jenni Falconer and Bay of Plenty MP Tom Rutherford outside the building where Consult365 Pāpāmoa will be.
A “godsend” is the reaction of one former resident whose husband died after he decided the 25-minute drive from Pāpāmoa to Tauranga Hospital was too far to go that night, with no after-hours option closer to home.
The walk-in clinic on Palm Springs Boulevard in Pāpāmoa East will be called Consult365 Pāpāmoa.
Owner Jenni Falconer said it would operate under a “hybrid” model, with in-person and telehealth medical services available.
Falconer - the founder and chief executive of 24-hour telehealth serviceEmergency Consult - said she recently moved to the fast-growing coastal suburb and researched after-hours medical services in Pāpāmoa.
Falconer said the clinic would provide Pāpāmoa people with more “access” to nearby health services and help relieve pressure on Tauranga Hospital and primary care providers.
She said the consultation cost for adults was $89 and $49 for children.
However, Falconer said she hoped it could be free for children aged under 14 and Community Service Card holders by the time the clinic opened in early January. She planned to work with Te Whatu Ora and the Primary Health Organisation to find out what funding might be available.
Falconer said the clinic would have a full-time equivalent staff of 29, with doctors, nurse practitioners and paramedics being rostered on-site.
When doctors were not available on-site they would be available via telehealth, she said.
A “highly skilled nursing workforce” would always be at the clinic, and it would have 24/7 support from emergency department consultants, who could advise, treat and refer patients accordingly.
Nurse practitioners could also prescribe, assess and treat patients, she said.
The clinic would have access to radiology for x-rays and she hoped to add a pharmacy on-site, she said.
Falconer said opening the clinic was “exciting” and it would be the only 24-hour clinic in the Bay of Plenty. She was not aware of anything similar operating elsewhere in New Zealand, either.
“If it works, then we will look to open up more.
“I think the problem we’re going to be faced with is too many patients rather than not enough. And we’re fully prepared for that.”
It came after her husband Michael, 75, died in 2016 after his arm started swelling and he decided the 25-minute drive from Pāpāmoa to Tauranga Hospital was too far and he would wait until the morning.
Killalea, who now lives in Auckland, told the Bay of Plenty Times the new clinic would be a “godsend”.
“I would’ve loved that [to have been there] when my husband was so ill.”
Killalea said it would be “wonderful” for the Pāpāmoa and Te Puke populations - which had “grown so much” - as they may no longer have to travel to Tauranga for after-hours care.
Newly elected Bay of Plenty MP Tom Rutherford, National, said the new clinic would generate “positive health changes” for the local community.
“Throughout the campaign, I heard from people about how important it was for them to have the necessary and appropriate healthcare facilities available to them in their own community.”
Many people in Pāpāmoa were travelling to 2nd Ave or Tauranga Hospital, he said.
“We’ve got a real health crisis and shortage at the moment here locally. Anything that can make a dent in that space is going to be really, really positive.”