Previous article

News Articles

  • Fearless GP fought for many
  • By Carol Nader
  • 11/02/2009 Make a Comment
  • Contributed by: Stooge ( 1 article in 2009 )
Chris Towie, animal lover and defender of the underdog, is believed to have died.
WHENEVER Chris Towie came across an animal that was injured, he took it home and took care of it. Many animals came to call his Reedy Creek property home.

His mother, Betty, thinks he had three or four camels. Others say that his pets included many dogs, birds and an injured pony he picked up on the way to work one day.

"Every animal he found he took home," said Cheryl Ferguson, who worked with him for several months last year.

"He had camels and emus and horses, and about five dogs."

Dr Towie, 53, an outspoken GP and fierce advocate for the underdog, is believed to have died in the bushfires that assailed his home near Broadford.

"He was very courageous, and stood up for what he believed," Mrs Towie said. "He sometimes rubbed people up the wrong way. He was fearless in some ways."

Dr Towie, a man who would stare down bureaucracy to lobby for the rights of refugees and migrants, at one time made the list of 50 most intriguing GPs in a medical magazine, his mother said.

A high-profile example was the plight of Syrian-born grandmother Aziza Agha, 79, who died after immigration officials ignored medical advice about her condition and insisted that she travel from Broadmeadows to Melbourne for a visa-related check-up, despite warnings from Dr Towie that to do so would put her life at risk.

The examining doctor appointed by the Immigration Medical Board certified Mrs Agha, who was visiting from Lebanon, as fit to travel. Two days later, she died of a heart attack.

On her death certificate, Dr Towie cited "being harassed by the Department of Immigration" as the cause of death.

Dr Towie chose to work in areas of disadvantage.

In interviews with The Age in recent years he spoke passionately about the challenges faced by doctors treating drug-addicted patients.

Ms Ferguson — who was his personal assistant and manager at the Broadmeadows medical clinic where he used to work before leaving the practice to set up another one — remembers the time he brought a baby wallaby into the Broadmeadows clinic.

"The mother had been hit by a car and died, and he picked up this little thing and put it in his pocket and got it some special milk," she says.

The Broadmeadows clinic has been inundated with phone calls asking about him. He hasn't worked there for many months but still the calls come from patients whose lives he touched.

Source: https://www.smh.com.au/national/fearless-gp-fought-for-many-20090210-83kf.html


     5+1= 
    (Note: If wrong - comments will not be posted)
    Footnotes:

    1Will not be visible to public.
    2Receive notification of other comments posted for this article. To cease notification after having posted click here.
    3To make a link clickable in the comments box enclose in link tags - ie.<link>Link</link>.
    4To show an image enclose the image URL in tags - ie.<image>https://fredspage.com/box.jpg</image>. Note: image may be resized if too large

    To further have your say, head to our forum Click Here

    To contribute a news article Click Here

    To view or contribute a Quote Click Here

    Hosting & Support by WebPal© 2026 f4joz.com All rights reserved.