|
Home
|
|
Symptoms
|
|
Lyme Chat Group
|
|
Diagnosis
|
|
Treatment
|
|
World-wide Support Finder
|
|
Books/Video
|
|
RESEARCH
|
|
Lymelinks
|
|
Contact
|
|
Pets & Lyme
|
|
DONATIONS
|
|
Drug Info
|
|
Medical Dictionary
|
|
Board of Directors
|
 
Click on the graphic to vote for this
site as a Starting Point Hot Site.
|
|
|
No Warranties or Representations
Lyme Disease symptoms vary from person to person. (lymes disease lyme's disease lime disease limes disease)
The data and information presented in this web site are presented in good faith and believed to be accurate regarding Lyme disease (commonly misspelled lymes disease lyme's disease lime disease limes disease) and other related diseases. Any and all liability for the content or any omissions including any inaccuracies, errors, or misstatements in such data or information is expressly disclaimed. The web site is compiled for the sole purpose of informing community members of resources and information pertaining to Lyme Borreliosis Disease and its coinfections. Lyme disease symptoms may vary from person to person.
The Canadian Lyme Disease Foundation, Directors and members are not liable for any direct or indirect damages or any damages whatsoever resulting from loss of use, data or profits, whether in an action of contract, negligence or other tortious action arising out of or in connection with the use or performance of information available from this website.
Consult a qualified Lyme ( Borreliosis ) Disease literate doctor for medical advice if Lyme Disease is suspect to discuss your Lymes Disease Symptoms.
|
|
The Vancouver Sun
Squamish doctor awarded Order of Canada for years of public service
By Gerry Bellett, Vancouver Sun, August 6, 2009 8:01 PM
Dr. LaVerne Clifford Kindree has been admitted to the Order of Canada in
recognition for more than 50 years of public service in Squamish, which in
its length and depth can only be described as astonishing.
The citation for the award gives an indication of what the 87-year-old
Kindree has meant to his community:
He was the Squamish region's sole physician for many years, is the
longest-serving coroner in B.C. history, was instrumental in establishing
Squamish General Hospital, independently researched the prevalence of Lyme
Disease in B.C., was a founding member of the Squamish Chamber of Commerce
and was founding chairman of the Squamish Hospital Foundation
The citation skipped a few other things, such as the 23 years he spent on
city council and his eight years as a director of Squamish-Lillooet Regional
District.
But who's counting? It's a career that would have kept three people busy.
It began in 1948 when he and his new wife Norma, a registered nurse, stepped
off a Union Steamship ferry to take up residence as the only physician in
the Squamish region. Why did he go to a community which in those days had no
road or rail access to Vancouver, and a population of about 1,500, dependent
on logging?
"Well, they needed a doctor and didn't have anyone to look after them, and I
wanted to make something of myself," Kindree said Thursday from his home,
where he was presented with the award in a private ceremony on Wednesday.
"But as well as Squamish, I had to look after the Mount Currie Indian
Reserve in Pemberton," he added.
He and Norma worked as a team. "It was a partnership. She'd deliver babies
when I was away in Mount Currie," he said. The couple would have five
children of their own and four foster children.
"One of the first jobs I did here was to get a hospital. There was no
hospital when I came, but we opened one in 1952. It had 24 beds and I was
the only doctor to look after it. It opened just in time for the polio
epidemic," he said.
That epidemic offered him the opportunity to observe and record how an
isolated community was affected by an infectious disease.
"During the epidemic, I'd say 90 per cent of the community were infected
with the virus, but only a few developed the disease and we had several
pulmonary cases that had to be flown to Vancouver for iron lung treatment,"
he said.
In 1988 his daughter Diane, a registered nurse, developed Lyme disease after
being bitten by a tick in her West Vancouver garden.
At the time, her father believed she had the disease, but other medical
experts pooh-poohed the idea that people could get the disease in B.C., he
said.
This would lead him to a five-year private investigation and, with the help
of Dr. Sanyet Banerjee, a microbiologist with the Centre for Vector-Borne
Disease at the University of B.C., he proved that there were a number of
locations in B.C. where the ticks that produce the disease were present.
Doing the field work with Diane to identify the ticks was the highlight of
his career, he said.
They would trap mice and examine them for ticks, then examine the ticks to
see if they were carrying the pathogens for the disease.
"We eventually proved there were 24 sites in B.C. that contained Lyme
disease in ticks," he said.
Today, 61 years after arriving on the coast, the Saskatchewan-born,
now-retired physician is still trying to improve things in his community.
"We're building a long-term-care hospital and we need to get a CT scanner.
I'm on the Squamish Hospital Foundation and so far we've raised about $2
million for surgical equipment," he said.
Given the scope of his career, Kindree said he would encourage newly
qualified physicians to go into remote communities. "I think they should go
to the places that need them," he said.
gbellett@vancouversun.com
© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun
TOP
|
| |
|