“There are certain people who are part of my heart”
By Samantha Elley
For the last 40 years, patients and staff of the Evans Head Medical Centre have had the pleasure of dealing with Marion Smith, but that came to an end last Monday week when she finally retired from a job she never expected to have.
“I took my baby to the doctor when he was nine months old,” Said Marion Smith.
“And they offered the job to me.
“I wasn’t looking for a job and they were the days that Paul Walsh and Ernie Finberg were the doctors and Lorraine Aleckson was there. We are now lifelong friends.”
That baby, Brock, is now 40 years old and Marion has done reception, practice management and dealing with the many people who have walked through the doors of the small village practice over that time.
“And it’s become a generational thing,” she said.
“The people that were little people when I started, they have brought in their babies and they treat you like their aunty.
“It’s just the most beautiful feeling.”
Marion said she has been through the tragedies and joys with many of the clients to the practice, and while others would shy away from such emotion, she takes a different view.
“It’s a real privilege to be part of someone’s terrible sorrow,” she said.
“For them to share it with you.”
Being part of the community has been a great joy for Marion as well, as people share their lives with her.
“It’s like an extended family,” she said.
“There are certain people who are part of my heart.”
One of the biggest changes Marion has seen over her time at the practice has been the growth of the town.
The need for new doctors to attend to the increasing population, meant that she had to help source doctors from further afield.
“I negotiated with people in America to bring the doctors over,” she said.
“Female doctors in our little town. That was a big change.”
Covid was a tumultuous time for the practice as well.
“Covid was scary,” Marion said.
“You really had to think about going to work, as I’m an asthmatic so I really got a bit (worried).
“Then I thought, it’s important because if we don’t come…it’s very hard when you can’t cuddle people, when they walk up to the counter and they are in tears.”
Then there was the patient who was a cat.
“At one stage I had a patient come around the back door with their cat for the doctor to try and save,” laughed Marion.
“There was no vet back then.
“Poor Dr Walsh tried to stitch the cat up.”
Marion’s lasting memories will be the many patients and staff she has worked with, but she is also looking forward to time with her family and indulging in her hobby of house decorating.
“I get to go home,” she said.
“In all my lifetime I’ve never had time at home.
“I’ve worked the whole time and now I get to enjoy my family.”
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