Kathy Knight (previously known as Kathy Crossland) grew up in the UK where she trained as a dietitian. In 1996 she told her Mum she’d be away for a year and went to Vanuatu as a United Nations volunteer to work for the World Health Organisation. From there she went to Fiji with UNICEF as a regional nutrition advisor, primarily with maternal/child heath.
Kathy has travelled extensively through the Pacific where she met her “Kiwi bloke”. They married and moved to New Zealand where she had four daughters. “Mum gave up waiting for me to come home and moved here 13 years ago!” she says.
Kathy is a self-proclaimed “eco hippy from way back”. She has a 1/3 acre section with fruit trees, a veggie garden and chickens. Her happy place is Ngaranui beach in Raglan, with her dog.
“I enjoy tramping and got the Tora Coastal Walk in two-weeks before lockdown 2020 (pictured below)! I’m training for the 12km Round the Bridges run this year – I have managed the 6km, but now it’s in writing and you will all hold me to account.”
Kathy worked for the Waikato Diabetes Service for 15 years, primarily with diabetes in pregnancy, but more recently with diabetic kidney disease (DKD) and with the high-risk foot (HRF) teams. In all three teams she has seen the worst complications of diabetes – the miscarriages, decline to renal failure and amputations. But she has also seen the best of people overcoming adversity.
“I have supported some women through 3 or 4 pregnancies in those 15 years, and seen their hard work and determination to gain good glycaemic control resulting in the joy of healthy babies. And I have helped many people with type 2 diabetes to gain better understanding of their condition, improve glycaemic control and stabilise their complications or save a foot.”
Kathy is a member of the NZSSD guidelines group and contributed to the most recent guidance for T2 diabetes in New Zealand.
“My 15 years with the Waikato DHB have been firefighting, ambulance at the bottom of the cliff stuff. My passion has always been education, teaching levels 7 and 8 diabetes papers at WINTEC and supporting nurses to be the best they can be as diabetes educators. Nutrition is the cornerstone of diabetes management, but my role with Pinnacle extends far beyond this.”
Some of the ways Kathy will be supporting the Pinnacle Waikato network include:
Kathy has established links at secondary care for referral of patients who meet the criteria for DKD support or HRF and is always at the end of the phone if practices need support with a patient, or simply have a niggly question.
Kathy Knight, Clinical Diabetes Specialist Waikato
Kathy.Knight@pinnacle.health.nz
027 642 5846
Sue van Mierlo is a nurse practitioner working as part of the Lakes Extended Care Team. In her role she supports people to self-manage long-term conditions and diseases, including managing diabetes. A large number of her clients are Māori.
Read moreFunding of continuous glucose monitoring and automated insulin delivery begins on 1 October. The Waikato Regional Diabetes Service will take the lead in supporting whānau with Type 1 diabetes (T1D) with this change. Not all people living with T1D are known to the regional diabetes service. In order to re-engage these whānau with the funded technology, please do a query build of your patients with T1D so they can be informed of the localities of drop in clinics and CGM start education.
The clinical diabetes specialist in primary care provides clinical mentorship and advice to the practice team in supporting patients with diabetes.
View detailsA guide for clinical management of type 2 diabetes, to support nurses at all levels to develop their knowledge and clinical reasoning in diabetes care.