
A year after he ditched the stethoscope for the steering wheel, dump truck driver Jeff Kai Fong found himself thinking about one of the last patients he treated in a medical career that spanned more than three decades.
The 26-year-old woman was suffering a major anaphylactic response to an allergen and, even after two doses of adrenaline, had 鈥渄umped her blood pressure into her boots鈥, the former emergency physician said.
鈥淪he had like a 50 systolic [blood pressure] and you should have like 120. So that means you wouldn鈥檛 have a palpable pulse 鈥 I managed to get a second [intravenous] line in and we had bags of fluid under our armpits, pumping it into her body as fast as we could.
鈥淪he picked up [but] she was 26, so if it went badly that was going to be a f***ing disaster.鈥
Thinking back on the experience as he drove his 10-tonne, six-wheeler dump truck, the 61-year-old realised how stressful his old life had been.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 even know how I coped with that. I certainly wouldn鈥檛 want to go back to it.鈥
And he won鈥檛 be. Kai Fong, an Auckland father and grandfather, is among those this decade who鈥檝e walked away from the high-pressure jobs they鈥檝e devoted much of their working lives to.
Healthcare was among sectors hit hard by worker shortages even before the burnout-inducing Covid-19 pandemic, with a Health New Zealand - Te Whatu Ora briefing to Health Minister Dr Shane Reti in January showing the country is short almost 500 GPs, and that number could double in the next 10 years.
It鈥檚 not just the acute pressures of helping patients teetering between life and death, but how the overall health system 鈥渏ust grinds you down鈥, Kai Fong said.
鈥淭hey change the system every time they change the Government. They never figure out what works. It鈥檚 all about management and money 鈥 if you under fund something 10 or 20% every year, what do you think you鈥檒l have?
鈥淎nd then the population just keeps growing. The stress of the job is so bad now that nobody wants to do it.鈥
Healthcare workers were put under enormous pressure by the Covid-19 pandemic worldwide, including in New Zealand - and the demand for health services remains high.
He鈥檇 planned to hold on until the winter of 2022, but instead quit medicine in February 2021, ending a career that included stints as a city and rural GP, running his own urgent care clinic for three years and, finally, working as an urgent care physician at private A&E Shore Care in Northcross, Auckland.
鈥淸When] Covid hit, the winter of 2020 was just terrible because GPs wouldn鈥檛 see anyone with Covid, there was no vaccine and [large numbers] were dying [overseas].鈥
He didn鈥檛 feel supported to do the job, and patients were complaining more, so when the various certificates he needed to practise came up for renewal - at an annual cost of about $6000 - Kai Fong decided to 鈥減unch out early鈥.
鈥淎t the end I just felt they didn鈥檛 deserve my work anymore ... I was completely burnt to a crisp.鈥
When he quit medicine, former doctor Jeff Kai Fong considered becoming a postman but opted instead to drive trucks. Photo / Jason Oxenham
Kai Fong had taken a few breaks from medicine over his career, including a six-month stint driving trucks just after finishing his medical training, and a year working as a technician for BMW after going to automotive school. He also found time to get his private helicopter pilot鈥檚 licence.
Among the new jobs he considered was becoming a postie.
鈥淚 really love riding my motorcycle so I thought maybe I could deliver mail on one of those little scooters, because I鈥檒l be riding every day. But then I watched them and they don鈥檛 really ride, they just putt around on the footpath.鈥
A 鈥渢ruck driving adventure鈥 in North America also appealed, but he didn鈥檛 know how to drive trucks using the Roadranger gearbox, prevalent in American trucks and designed to give drivers more control with heavy loads or challenging terrain.
鈥淚f you bugger up the gearbox, it鈥檚 20 grand to fix it. So they won鈥檛 give you a job on one of these trucks unless you鈥檝e had two years of experience.鈥
The solution would come in his Shore Care consultation room, when GilesCivil owner Joe Coombe arrived as a patient with an infected leg.
Kai Fong told Coombe of his plans to take up truck driving in North America, and when Coombe returned for more treatment a couple of months later, Kai Fong had more news - the next day would be his last in medicine.
鈥淗e said, 鈥楢re you still going to go and drive trucks in Canada? Because you need to learn Roadranger gearboxes and I鈥檝e got one of those trucks鈥. I said, 鈥楽o, you鈥檇 give me a job?鈥 and he said, 鈥榊es鈥.鈥
Former emergency doctor Jeff Kai Fong says he'll never go back to medicine. He now works as a truck driver for GilesCivil. Photo / Jason Oxenham
Three years on, plans to drive in North America are in the rear view mirror along with Kai Fong鈥檚 medical career.
鈥淭he best word to describe [my job] is fun. Driving a big truck is just fun.鈥
At GilesCivil he gets a good hourly rate - albeit a quarter of what he used to earn - for working on average 45 hours a week, is given a paid day off for his birthday, no longer works through Christmas, weekends or evenings and gets a $100 grocery voucher and lunch out at Christmas.
He also joins workmates on a fully-funded annual fishing trip, and has free medical insurance.
鈥淭his is the first time in 30 years I鈥檝e had medical insurance, and it鈥檚 as a truck driver. They don鈥檛 give you medical insurance when you鈥檙e a doctor.鈥
Small house sites, narrow driveways, fences and hedges kept things challenging, but not stressful, Kai Fong told the Herald.
After years of feeling unappreciated, he was getting used to a boss who鈥檒l 鈥渁ctually thank me鈥, for bringing a load of gravel to the site.
鈥淚t鈥檚 like light and dark [compared to medicine]. I鈥檝e been in a really good place since I started. I couldn鈥檛 go back to medicine, wild horses couldn鈥檛 drag me back.鈥
Former medical doctor Jeff Kai Fong says he is happier in his work with his new career as a truck driver. Photo / Jason Oxenham
Despite the perks, he still plans to quit work at 65 - there鈥檚 too much else he wants to do, from cartooning to competitive field archery, Kai Fong said.
鈥淚鈥檝e started writing politically incorrect T-shirts and I really enjoy that, and I created a little cartoon character - I want to do a bit of cartooning because I鈥檝e always liked it.
鈥淚鈥檇 also really like to do some flax weaving.鈥
Until then he lives in a 鈥渢railer on wheels鈥 at his daughter鈥檚 home, and has already bought his retirement home, a 2014 Toyota Hiace van.
鈥淚鈥檓 going to live on the beach, and just be absolutely free.鈥
Cherie Howie is an Auckland-based reporter who joined the Herald in 2011. She has been a journalist for more than 20 years and specialises in general news and features.
Take your Radio, Podcasts and Music with you
Get the iHeart App
Get more of the radio, music and podcasts you love with the FREE iHeartRadio app. Scan the QR code to download now.
Download from the app stores
Stream unlimited music, thousands of radio stations and podcasts all in one app. iHeartRadio is easy to use and all FREE