Alan Ronald Kerr CNZM (born 1934/1935) is a New Zealand cardiac surgeon who, after his career at Green Lane Hospital, spent almost twenty years volunteering in Palestine where he operated on paediatric heart patients and trained Palestinian surgeons.
Kerr graduated from the University of Otago with a degree in medicine in 1957. [1] After three years at Wellington Hospital he moved to work at Green Lane Hospital in 1961 as a research fellow in the Surgical Development Laboratory where he researched blood flow in the bronchial arteries and in bypass procedures. [1] He then became a registrar working at Green Lane, Auckland and Middlemore Hospitals. [1] In 1967 he went to Alabama to work in the University of Alabama Medical Center under Dr John Kirklin. [1] He returned to a surgical position at Green Lane in 1969. [1] He worked in the cardio-thoracic surgical team with Brian Barratt-Boyes and was one of the surgeons who performed the first heart-lung bypass operation at Green Lane in 1958. [1] [2]
Staff from Green Lane hosted and trained doctors from overseas and visited foreign hospitals [1] [2] In 1981 Kerr visited hospitals in New Delhi and Madras (now Chennai) doing cardiopulmonary bypass operations and delivering training in cardiac surgery. [1]
A special supplement of the New Zealand Medical Journal, published in 2001, honoured the work of Kerr and five other cardiology and cardiothoracic consultants: Trevor Agnew, Pat Clarkson, John Mercer, John Neutze, and Toby Whitlock. [3]
In 2001 Kerr joined the Palestine Children's Relief Fund volunteering his services as a paediatric cardiac surgeon. [4] [5] Between 2001 and 2018 he made over 40 trips to the West Bank and Gaza working in Makassed Hospital in East Jerusalem, Palestine Medical Complex in Ramallah and Al Shifa Hospital in Gaza. [4] [5] [6] As well as doing surgery he trained other surgeons and developed the paediatric surgery programme at Makassed. [4] [6]
In 2007 film maker Paula Whetu Jones commenced filming Kerr and his wife Hazel on their trips to Palestine. [7] Hazel worked with children in refugee camps and at a school for deaf children teaching art and drama. [5] [8] The film The Doctor's Wife was released in 2025. [7]
Kerr was appointed a Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit, for services to cardiothoracic surgery, in the 1997 New Year Honours. [9]