The Karitane Hospitals were six hospitals in New Zealand run by the Plunket Society, located in Auckland, Christchurch, Dunedin, Invercargill, Wanganui and Wellington. They were established as training hospitals for Karitane nurses and cared for babies with malnutrition and other dietetic complaints, and premature babies. They also offered mother care training and assistance. The first hospital opened in 1907 and the hospitals were closed between 1978 and 1980 due to financial difficulties and changes in society and maternity services.
Each hospital catered for about 30 babies and 10 mothers. They were staffed by matrons, nurses, honorary visiting doctors and the Karitane nurse trainees. [1]
Until 1939 the services in Karitane hospitals were generally free, though some users did pay for care. The costs of running the hospitals were largely covered by the fees paid by Karitane nurse trainees. [2] With the changes in health care instituted by the Labour government in the 1930s–1940s the hospitals' monopoly on caring for premature babies was lost. In 1939 (under the Social Security Act) treatment in hospitals became free and the Karitane hospitals were not permitted to charge fees, though the government did subsidise mothers and babies being cared for. By the late 1950s Karitane hospitals were facing financial difficulties and possible closure but in 1958 the government made emergency grants to keep the hospitals open. The 1959 Consultative Committee on Infant and Pre-school Health Services in New Zealand investigated Plunket and the role of and need for the Karitane hospitals. The Committee supported the work of Karitane hospitals and increasing government subsidies. [1] [2]
The National government increased the subsidies to private hospitals in 1962 which helped the financial stability of the Karitane hospitals. [2] In 1978 it was decided that the hospitals would be closed and replaced by Plunket's family support units. The hospitals' running costs had increased, occupancy was not sufficient and they handled only 4% of Plunket's caseload. [2]
All the Karitane hospitals trained Karitane nurses, while Plunket nurses were trained only in the Dunedin hospital until 1964 when Auckland became a training school for Plunket nurses. Plunket nurses had to be registered nurses or midwives but Karitane nurses did not. Plunket nurses could work in the community for Plunket or in Karitane hospitals while Karitane nurses worked as baby nurses in private homes. They were often in demand both in New Zealand and in Britain. [2]
After the war there was a shortage of nurses and many nurses left after training either going overseas or taking up positions in the nurseries in public hospitals where there were better employment conditions. [2]
Karitane training was initially 12 months but increased to 16. In the 1930s the cost of training was £40. A disadvantage of the training was that trainees saw only unwell babies. This was rectified by having some 'normal' babies at the hospital and by employing single mothers as domestic staff. This option for single mothers was an alternative to adopting their babies out. [2]
In 1974, with changes in society, the training programme was changed to twelve months in the hospital plus six months in the community, in homes with Plunket nurses and in early childhood centres. [2]
The first hospital in Dunedin was opened by Truby King in 1907 in his holiday cottage on the Karitane Peninsula. It was called the Karitane Home for Babies but became the Karitane-Harris Hospital after moving in 1910 to a home donated by Wolf Harris, a wealthy Dunedinite. [1] [2] [3] It closed in July 1978. [1] Anne Pattrick was matron in 1920. [4]
In 2011 it was reported that the hospital building, which had been used as a rest home and backpackers' hostel, was to be converted into apartments. [5] In 2014 the refurbishment project received a grant from the Dunedin City Council. [6] In 2015 the hospital, located in Every St, was listed as a Category 1 historic place by Heritage New Zealand. [7]
In 1917 the Lady King Karitane Hospital opened in Cashmere. [1] [8] A new hospital was opened in 1963 following funding from the government but it closed in December 1978. [1]
The Truby King–Stewart Karitane Hospital opened in 1919 in the former residence of John Stewart and his wife Frances. [1]
Moves to establish an Auckland Karitane hospital commenced in 1923 and a property was donated by A.C. Caughey, one of the founders of the firm Smith and Caughey's. It was a large house of 16 rooms in McLean St, Mt Albert. Fundraising in 1923–1924 raised the necessary £15,000 to adapt the house. The hospital was officially opened by the mayor, Sir James Gunson, on 16 October 1924 with more than 1000 people in attendance. [2]
At the outset the purpose of the hospital had to be defined. It was not a foundling hospital or a home for sick babies needing cures for infant diseases but for babies suffering from malnutrition or dietetic conditions. In the 1930s the Karitane hospital cared for all premature babies from Auckland and St Helens Hospitals. It assisted new mothers, especially helping them to breast feed, and ran a mothercraft home. Because it was a training hospital for Karitane nurses and cared for premature babies the hospital had a high ratio of nurses to babies e.g. 18 babies and 16 nurses in 1926. [2]
In 1935 the hospital was renamed the Truby King Karitane Hospital in recognition of King's work for the Plunket Society. [2] In the 1950s, due to the opening of Cornwall Hospital, Karitane was no longer the centre for care of premature babies. [2] In spite of this and financial problems plans for a new Karitane hospital were begun in 1953 and the foundation stone was laid in 1957 by the Governor General Sir Willoughby Norrie. The new hospital was opened on 14 June 1962 by the Health Minister Don MacKay. The old building became the nurses' home. [2] In the same year the hospital benefitted from the increase in government subsidies to private hospitals, putting it in a better financial position. [2]
In the 1970s it was noted that the hospital was taking almost no premature babies or poorly fed babies but cared for babies who showed failure to thrive due to poor social circumstances. The hospital's services were free and many admissions came from underprivileged homes. [2] The hospital continued to train Karitane nurses, and Plunket nurses from 1964. [2]
The hospital closed in October 1978, and the building was put up for sale. [2]
Dr William Henry Parkes was the first senior medical officer from 1924 to 1933, followed by Dr Tracy Inglis (1933–1935), Dr Harold Pettit (1935–1950), Dr Basil Quin (1950–1973), Dr Alison Hunter (1973–1974), Dr Margaret Liley (1974–1978). Dr Edward Sayers was also on the medical team, handing over to Dr Alice Bush when he served in World War II. [9] Bush worked at Karitane from 1940 to 1974 and became a paediatrician and family planning advocate. [2]
There was a high turnover of matrons in the first few years, many of them working in other Karitane hospitals or in other nursing positions in Plunket. [2] Some of the later matrons were Miss Sydney Lusk (1939–1945), Miss W.M. Slater (1945–1950), Miss A.M. Longden (1950–1951), Mrs M. Boyce (1951–1954), Miss K.B. Beuke (1957–1971) and Miss Lorna Leman (1971–1978). [2]
The Karitane-Hunt Hospital was opened in December 1926 in a house and garden donated by W.D. Hunt. [1] [10] [11] Although the local Plunket Society campaigned to keep it open the hospital closed in March 1980. [1]
In 1925 a public meeting was held to establish a Karitane Hospital in Wellington. Truby King donated two acres (three-quarters of a hectare) of his land in Melrose, where there was already a Karitane Products Society factory and King's house. £25,000 was raised. The building was designed by the architects Gray Young Morton and Young. The hospital was opened by the Duchess of York on 5 March 1927. [12] Its official name was the Sir Truby and Lady King Karitane Hospital. [13]
A nurses' home building was opened in 1964. [1] [14] The hospital closed in July 1978. [1]
The hospital building, which was earthquake prone, was demolished in 2020. [15] It was in private ownership despite being in the Truby King Historic Area which is on the heritage list held by Heritage New Zealand. [16] The nurses' home was earthquake strengthened and used as housing. [15]
Montgomery Spencer (1893–1943) [17] was honorary paediatrician from 1934. [18]
The Royal New Zealand Plunket Trust provides a range of free services aimed at improving the development, health and wellbeing of children under the age of five within New Zealand, where it is commonly known simply as Plunket. Its mission is "to ensure that New Zealand children are among the healthiest in the world". Much of Plunket's work is organised by volunteer bases throughout New Zealand.
The following lists events that happened during 1907 in New Zealand.
Alice Mary Bush was a pioneering New Zealand female physician, paediatrician and activist for family planning services and abortion access.
Sir Frederic Truby King, generally known as Truby King, was a New Zealand health reformer and Director of Child Welfare. He is best known as the founder of the Plunket Society.
Seacliff is a small village located north of Dunedin in the Otago region of New Zealand's South Island. The village lies roughly halfway between the estuary of Blueskin Bay and the mouth of the Waikouaiti River at Karitane, on the eastern slopes of Kilmog hill. Coast Road, an old route north from Dunedin, and the South Island Main Trunk Railway pass through the village.
The Canadian Mothercraft Society (Mothercraft) is a non-profit, charitable NGO that serves children ages 0 to 6, their families, their teachers, and their community.
Alice Hannah Holford was a New Zealand nurse, midwife and hospital matron.
Hanorah Philomena FitzGibbon MBE was a New Zealand civilian and military nurse, hospital matron and nursing administrator.
Muriel Helen Deem was a New Zealand medical doctor, medical officer, Plunket medical adviser and university lecturer.
Eileen Marjorie Fosbery Chambers was a New Zealand nurse, hospital matron, nursing tutor and administrator. She was born in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia on 29 May 1906.
Evelyn Gertrude Brown,, usually known as Eva, was a New Zealand civilian and military nurse. She served during the First World War and was the only New Zealand nurse to receive the Royal Red Cross and Bar.
Amelia Bagley was a New Zealand hospital matron, midwife and nursing administrator. She was born in Dunedin, New Zealand on 2 October 1870.
Charles Maurice Bevan-Brown was a New Zealand psychiatrist and psychotherapist who practised in Christchurch from the 1940s to the 1960s. He established a clinic for medical psychology and founded the New Zealand Association of Psychotherapists. He was influential in the formation and ethos of Parents' Centres New Zealand.
Jessie Torrance was a New Zealand nurse and deaconess.
The 1948 New Year Honours in New Zealand were appointments by King George VI on the advice of the New Zealand government to various orders and honours to reward and highlight good works by New Zealanders, and to celebrate the passing of 1947 and the beginning of 1948. They were announced on 1 January 1948.
Margaret (Daisy) Hitchcock was a nurse from New Zealand who served in France in World War I.
The St Helens Hospitals were maternity hospitals located in seven New Zealand cities. They were the first state-run maternity hospitals in the world offering both midwifery services and midwifery training. The first hospital opened in 1905 in Wellington and the last one in Wanganui in 1921. The services of the St Helens Hospitals were gradually incorporated into other hospitals and the last hospital to close was in Auckland in 1990.
The 1939 New Year Honours in New Zealand were appointments by King George VI to various orders and honours to reward and highlight good works by New Zealanders. The awards celebrated the passing of 1938 and the beginning of 1939, and were announced on 3 January 1939.
The Mothercraft Training Society was an organization in the United Kingdom which trained expectant and new mothers, nurses, midwives, and health visitors in 'mothercraft', with the aim of bringing down infant mortality. Briefly known as the Babies of the Empire Society, before taking on its new name, it established its own infant welfare clinic, with a dietetic hospital, and ran a year-long training course from which students emerged as qualified nursery nurses.
Eunice Mary Eichler was a New Zealand Salvation Army officer, nurse and midwife. She established New Zealand's first school for pregnant teenagers in 1973, and was an advocate for open adoption.