暴风资源

Holistic approach to nursing comes full circle

Monday 28 March 2022

The road to become a m膩tangi tapuhi (nurse practitioner) has been a long but exceptional one for Kate Te Pou, spanning more than two decades.

Graduation photo of Kate Te Pou

Kate Te Pou and her husband Tuiringa at Massey graduation for her Master in Nursing in 2021.

Last updated: Friday 25 November 2022

Kate says it鈥檚 about the journey, no matter how long it takes, that brings you to your true calling.

鈥淚 deviated off course several times. You might have to put your dream on hold but if you鈥檝e got a vision, it doesn鈥檛 matter. Even if life side-tracks you, that still makes you who you are. It gives you those experiences and builds you up.鈥

Kate鈥檚 nurse training began in 1986, after which she enrolled with 暴风资源 in the late 90s with a plan to become a Nurse Practitioner (NP) in the Bay of Plenty. Returning to Massey in 2018 to complete her Master of Nursing and a postgraduate certificate for the NP training pathway, she says she was welcomed back to an institution that recognised the wealth of experience she was bringing with her.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 what I love about Massey, they leave the door open and support you along the way. They looked at what I had done in the space since I left and said, 鈥楥ome on back! You鈥檒l be fine!鈥 And I was.鈥

Strong foundations

From an early age, Kate wanted to be a nurse. She spent much of her early childhood in hospital due to asthma and survived two paediatric arrests, with her health care experiences giving her a deep appreciation for the nurses that cared for her.

Graduating from Waiariki Polytechnic (now Toi Ohomai Institute of Technology) as a comprehensive registered nurse in 1989, Kate鈥檚 journey saw her moving from general surgery into critical care during her 12 years at Whakatane Hospital. She completed a Bachelor of Health Science (Nursing) with Charles Sturt University in Australia in 1997, then began her Master of Nursing with Massey in 1999.

Kate took a pause in 2001 to move to the United Kingdom with her family, originally for a year, to explore her mother鈥檚 heritage. In the six years that passed, Kate worked as a nurse manager in an Intensive Care Unit (ICU) and resumed a master鈥檚 programme in Clinical Health Care Practice with the University of Oxford. This supported her path to work in a NP-led outreach programme, essentially ICU without walls.

When she moved back to the Waikato in 2007, Kate realised their health care system was not yet in a place where a similar outreach project could be established.

鈥淚 sort of gave up on my dream of becoming a nurse practitioner, I moved to Hawke鈥檚 Bay in 2011 and continued to work in the ICU down here. An opportunity came up to become a Respiratory Clinical Nurse Specialist and I thought with my childhood, and my critical care experience, this would be a great time to move into this new space.鈥

Seeing the big picture

In 2018, Kate returned to her studies with Massey, where she was tasked with creating a M膩ori model of health care for a summer school course.

鈥淚t was a real lightbulb moment because it was relationship-centred. In whakawhanaungatanga, establishing relationships in a M膩ori context, you must give a little of yourself 鈥 this is who I am, and this is where I come from 鈥 to develop a connection, instead of just taking their name, their identity, their personal history in a one-sided relationship. I have always gone against the grain of traditional health models of remaining detached, so this reaffirmed how I practiced for all those years in nursing.鈥

Kate鈥檚 Te Manawa o Te Ora/The Breath of Life concept emphasised the importance of developing meaningful connections between tapuhi (nurse), t膩ngata whaiora (person seeking health), and their wh膩nau. Kate received top marks in this paper and stood out to Professor Karen Hoare who invited Kate into the NP programme.

鈥淚 wanted to become a nurse practitioner in long term care with a respiratory focus looking at the whole person and their health. Studies around long term, multiple conditions show that whaiora and wh膩nau want consistency and continuity of care, ideally by working with the same person,鈥 Kate says.

Kate Te Pou profile picture

Kate presenting an interactive respiratory health display at the Hauora tent at Te Matatini

The support to persevere

In 2021, with the help of a scholarship granted by Head of the School of Nursing Professor Nicolette Sheridan, Ng膩puhi, Kate began what she describes as the hardest year of her study life. It was the encouragement offered by her Massey wh膩nau that saw her through.

鈥淭he pressure was on. There鈥檚 so much to be done and you鈥檝e got one year to develop the skills and knowledge to make you a safe and competent nurse practitioner. There were tears 鈥 many tears! But I got reassurance from my nurse practitioner mentors in Hawke鈥檚 Bay and by the Massey staff, especially from my academic supervisors Victoria Perry and Professor Karen Hoare.鈥

One of the biggest sources of strength for Kate was the mentors who were passionate about doing more to improve the NP space. She lists Professor Hoare and Dr Alison Pirret as two of her many role models.

鈥淚 would just be looking at these giants in the nurse practitioner world thinking, wow, I want to be like you one day, I want to be influential and make change. Throughout the struggles, I was being uplifted by seeing these amazing people at Massey. Massey exposes you to big thinkers, people moving in amazing spaces.鈥

Kate is grateful for the time she had at Massey and how it brought her back to her original path.

鈥淚鈥檓 glad I continued with my studies and I鈥檓 glad that Massey invited me for my worth because I had given up on my vision. When Professor Hoare rang me and invited me that first year, it really helped to feel like somebody saw my potential.鈥

A real highlight was graduating with her Master of Nursing in 2021.

鈥淚 have the photos from the ceremony, and I can see Dr Pirret and Professor Hoare clapping for me, and it鈥檚 so moving because these are my giants and they鈥檙e applauding me. Graduation was such a special moment and I鈥檓 so glad in amongst the craziness last year, I got to celebrate with both my family and the extended Massey wh膩nau.鈥

graduation photo

Professor Karen Hoare, Kate, and fellow graduate Pam Rudolph at Massey Graduation 2021

Strength from wh膩nau

Kate is currently working in Hawke鈥檚 Bay as a qualified and registered Nurse Practitioner in long-term care with an expertise in respiratory health and is set to graduate with her postgraduate certificate in May. She contributes a lot of her success in completing it to the people around her.

鈥淵ou can鈥檛 do it on your own. I had an amazing husband who not only cooked for me all year but gave me the space I needed to study seven days a week. You鈥檝e got to have loving people at home that care and support you.鈥

Kate and her husband, Tuiringa, Ng膩i T奴hoe, have seven children between them, and 22 mokopuna. Spread out across New Zealand and Australia, Kate鈥檚 favourite pastime is travelling around to spend time with her wh膩nau.

family photo snow holiday

Kate and her wh膩nau enjoying a snow holiday in 2020.

Kate is a Tarar膩 M膩ori, the name given by Ng膩puhi for those who descend from M膩ori and Dalmatian heritage. Although not raised within her biological father鈥檚 wh膩nau, she says she鈥檚 grateful for the support and teachings she received as a wh膩ngai being raised within T奴wharetoa and by marriage into Ng膩i T奴hoe. This inspired an essence of the he t膩ngata principle in everything she does.

鈥淚鈥檝e had aunties for years going 鈥榃hen are you going to become Dr Kate?鈥 but now I can say, I鈥檝e become an equivalent of what my aunties would call a doctor. It鈥檚 because of having those conversations at the marae that inspired me to ask myself, 鈥榃hat can you do for the people?鈥欌

Looking to the future

Despite Kate鈥檚 long and rich journey, she still considers herself a junior within the field and has a lot more she wants to achieve.

鈥淚f I change one thing, it will be to make sure that nurse practitioners of the future have cemented pathways to come into. It鈥檚 about getting people to see their own worth, stepping up their clinical work whether in primary or secondary care, and bringing them forward to work in this amazing role.鈥

The NP field, while well-established overseas, is still a rising profession in New Zealand with the first NP being registered in 2001.

鈥淚t took years to get to the first 100 nurse practitioners. It鈥檚 starting to get momentum, now we鈥檙e at 604 which is one per cent of the clinical nursing field. As one of 24 of M膩ori decent, we make up four per cent of the NP workforce.

鈥淲e have to do so much more to prove our worth in this space, to change the mind of the medical model to a holistic Wh膩nau Ora model颅 鈥 it鈥檚 a big piece of work," Kate says.

When asked if she had any advice for people considering a career as a NP, or considering further study, Kate says, 鈥淛ust don鈥檛 give up 鈥 it doesn鈥檛 matter how hard it is or if it takes you 20 odd years like me, don鈥檛 give up because life鈥檚 still a journey. And Massey took me back!鈥

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