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Dr May Aung – Leaving an outstanding legacy for women鈥檚 health in the Cook Islands

After more than 25 years of outstanding practice in the Cook Islands, Dr May Aung will retire in June. As mini传媒入口 marks International Women鈥檚 Day, we spoke to Dr Aung about her career in healthcare and about practicing O&G in a remote and challenging Pacific location.

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The Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists

Updated
5 October 2023
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Dr May Aung moved to the Cook Islands in 1989, joining her husband Zaw Aung, who had been working there as a UN volunteer. They were initially based in Mangaia, the southern-most island. A general practitioner in Myanmar since 1975, May soon found herself working with patients there, despite not holding any official appointment. In 1993 she took a position on Aitutaki, the second-largest island, working there until 2001, when she was asked to move to the largest island Rarotonga, to work more closely with the Ministry of Health. May has been in Rarotonga since then, serving as head of her department from 2005, and eventually becoming Director of Hospital Health Services in 2017.

Obstetrics & gynaecology had always been an area of interest for May, ever since she was attached to an O&G department after completing her internship. However, in the Cook Islands it became increasingly central to her work, particularly as for much of her time there she was the only female doctor in the country.

鈥淚 wanted to do O&G all the time,鈥 May recalls. 鈥淏ut when I got to the Cook Islands, it pushed me more because I felt responsible as the only woman doctor in the country. And the women felt very comfortable with me looking after them.鈥

Dr May Aung has been treating patients in the Cook Islands for more than 25 years.

In 2004, May became the first non-Cook Islander to be awarded a scholarship through the New Zealand Scholarship Scheme, completing a Diploma in Gynaecology & Obstetrics at Fiji National University. There was the option for further study, but May was facing too many demands back in the Cook Islands.

鈥淚 was qualified to continue my Masters, and FNU waited for me five years,鈥 says May. 鈥淏ut sadly the Cook Islands wouldn鈥檛 let me go back because there was no-one to carry on the services in the country. They wouldn鈥檛 let me leave to continue my studies because there was no-one to work.鈥

And there has indeed been a lot of work. In Aitutaki, May oversaw around 50 deliveries each year; after moving to Rarotonga, her team was dealing with 250 to 300 births annually. May has been on call 24/7, attending every delivery, and she speaks with pride about the fact the Cook Islands has maintained a zero maternal mortality rate since 1995.

Alongside countless successful births, there have been other achievements along the way. May cites a mammogram screening program that she is currently overseeing, which follows on from a highly successful overhaul of the Islands鈥 cervical screening set-up.

鈥淲hen I started, we were using conventional smears on glass slides,鈥 she explains. 鈥淏ut now we鈥檙e doing HPV screening, which one only has to do every five years, and this improves our screening uptake. How did I get to that? I went to do a presentation in March 2019 in Auckland, and I met the New South Wales Australian team, and they supported me to progress to cervical cancer screening by HPV.鈥

These achievements have taken place amid the considerable challenges of operating in the Cook Islands. The country consists of 15 islands spread across 2,200,000 square kilometres of ocean, with transport links extremely limited, especially among the more remote northern islands. Staffing is another issue, with a shortage of midwives on many of the islands.

May describes one case of a woman with a ruptured ectopic pregnancy in Rakahanga, an island with no airstrip, necessitating a three-hour boat trip before she could receive treatment. In another case, May had to fly to Pukapuka to perform an emergency Caesarean taking with her a limited team as well as two drums of aviation fuel because there was none on the island for the return flight.

Challenges such as these are a constant for May: 鈥淐urrently I have four pregnant mothers who are due this week. I鈥檝e been trying to transfer them, but there is no fuel for the flight to go up, and one flight is down because of a brake problem. And my heart is very heavy because one is a gravida nine mother in Pukapuka.鈥

These challenges inevitably place an intense emotional burden on May: 鈥淚t is very lonely because you are the only person practicing O&G in the country. You are 24/7 on call, and I never failed to attend one delivery in my career. And sometimes, you are so tired but you still have to continue your clinics.鈥

Nonetheless, May draws great satisfaction from her work: 鈥淏ecause you have saved many lives, and the appreciation and gratitude from the families, I think it鈥檚 worth all the stress and the hard work. The children I delivered in Aitutaki and in Rarotonga, they鈥檙e now having babies, and I have delivered them. And when I go on the road, they are calling me 鈥楧r May, Dr May鈥, and they say 鈥極h, my mother told us you delivered me.鈥 It really makes me happy.鈥

For women O&G specialists considering working in the Pacific region, May advises: 鈥淚t is a very hard and challenging career, but it is worth it because you are saving lives and looking after not only one patient, but the whole family. I鈥檝e made lots of friends and I was able to help people to improve their health and change their family status through doing O&G.鈥

Dr Aung was instrumental in the Cook Islands’ hugely successful COVID-19 vaccination program.

Recently May has been heavily involved in a project quite removed from her usual O&G practice. Since late 2020 she has been instrumental in the rollout of the COVID-19 vaccine in the Cook Islands, and as she recounts it, her participation was somewhat unexpected.

鈥淚 just got pulled into this thing,鈥 she explains. 鈥淥ver Christmas 2020, the then-Secretary of Health decided to leave suddenly. I was told on the 24th, and the new secretary was a non-medical person. So I was dragged along to cabinet meetings with this new secretary, and the prime minister asked us 鈥楬ave you finished your deployment and COVID vaccination plan?鈥 And I had no knowledge. This is not my area, this is a public health area.鈥

Despite this, May agreed to help. She started to ask questions and gather information, reaching out to bodies such as UNICEF, the World Health Organization (WHO) and the New Zealand Ministry of Health for support. By Easter 2021, May and her team had put together a plan.

鈥淲e started vaccinations on 17 May on Rarotonga,鈥 she continues. 鈥淎nd we鈥檝e been going to the outer islands to give the first dose, second dose and the booster. We went around each village talking to the people before we gave the immunisation. So the uptake was very good. We鈥檝e covered 98% of the 12-plus population in Cook Islands. With the five to 11 age group, we are around about 82%.鈥

It鈥檚 an astonishing success that comfortably surpasses the efforts of many far wealthier nations 鈥 Australia and New Zealand included. But May is characteristically humble.

鈥淭his was not only the Ministry of Health effort, it was a community effort,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e were supported by all other agencies and ministries, and the traditional leaders, the church leaders, the youth, the NGOs like the Red Cross. So I think it is a united achievement by all the people of the Cook Islands.鈥

May鈥檚 remarkable work in the vaccine rollout serves to enhance an already extraordinary legacy during her time in the Cook Islands 鈥 one that her colleagues keenly endorse. Dr Martin Sowter, an obstetrician and gynaecologist based in Auckland and a member of mini传媒入口鈥檚 Global Health Committee, has regularly visited the Cook Islands for nearly 20 years to mentor colleagues and build O&G capacity there, has worked closely with May over that time.

鈥淓very doctor encounters a couple of colleagues over the course of a career that they regard as personal 鈥榮uperheroes鈥 鈥 an embodiment of everything that makes a great doctor,鈥 says Martin. 鈥淔or me, May has been one of those people. Her quiet, determined, meticulous and completely caring approach to her work and her patients has kept the women of the Cook Islands safe from the start of their pregnancies through to old age. In her role as the nation鈥檚 only O&G specialist she鈥檚 had a workload and range of responsibilities that most Australian and New Zealand colleagues would find crushing.

鈥淢ore recently, as the director of hospital services she has been a master at making politicians believe that a good idea was their idea and then 鈥榞etting stuff done鈥. I still fondly remember meeting her in Auckland a few weeks before their COVID vaccine rollout when the New Zealand program was still bogged down by committees and dithering. New Zealand experts were worried about cold chains, vaccine supplies and wondering if the Cook Islands could really run the vaccination program.

鈥淢ay and her team just threw everything at the project and rolled the program out across the nation鈥檚 13 inhabited islands in weeks, with possibly the highest and fastest vaccine uptake in the world. May is far too modest to take any credit for this but she was absolutely crucial to the success of their COVID vaccination campaign.鈥

Dr Amanda Noovao-Hill grew up in the Cook Islands. Now based in Queensland, she is currently Head of Secretariat for the Pacific Society for Reproductive Health (PSRH), of which May is a member. Last year May and Amanda secured funding for two midwifery leaders and a medical officer to represent the Cook Islands at last year鈥檚 PSRH conference in Samoa 鈥 though unfortunately due to travel logistics and COVID, the three clinicians were unable to attend.

In her capacity as Clinical Associate Professor in O&G at the FNU鈥檚 College of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences, and as a former mini传媒入口 Global Health Committee member, Amanda frequently provided support for May in efforts to strengthen O&G service and training in the Cook Islands. Strategies implemented by May and Amanda included: audio and video conferencing with the Rarotonga O&G Unit and the outer islands clinical teams providing advice and support; enabling on-site training of a local junior doctor and a postgraduate trainee; assisting with recruitment of regional O&G support; and facilitating training opportunities for other health-related specialties.

鈥淭hank you May for your love, sacrifice and service to the Cook Islands, and your professional collegiality to the regional academic institutions and our professional societies,鈥 says Amanda. 鈥淜ia manuia I toou akangaroianga. Te Atua te aroa.鈥

Now, May is finally on the verge of stepping away from O&G. She first broached the idea of retirement three years ago, but the Ministry kept persuading her to stay on. Now however, she is adamant she will not extend any further. It鈥檚 time for a well-earned rest.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 think I will do anything,鈥 she laughs. 鈥淚 will not be doing anything in regard to medicine. I will just enjoy life. I really don鈥檛 know what to do yet- maybe some planting flowers, or fabric painting, which I enjoy very much.鈥

And as for the Cook Islands?

鈥淚 will stay for a while, but we will definitely have to go back to Myanmar at some stage. I have family there. I have my house. So I will have to leave the Cook Islands, which will be sad. But I have been trying to prepare myself.鈥

Dr May Aung with her husband Dr Zaw Aung and Dr Martin Sowter.

CATEGORIES
Global health the College Women’s health

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