By Hannah McNamara
When Dr Allan Cook OAM walked into the Ocean International last Saturday, 30th August, it wasn’t just another evening, it was the closing chapter of a 60-year career that has left an indelible mark on Mackay and regional Queensland. Surrounded by colleagues, patients, and friends, the retiring orthopaedic surgeon celebrated not only his achievements, but also a life defined by dedication, resilience, and unforgettable stories.
Dr Cook holds an MB BS (Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery), is a FRCS (Eng) (Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons, England), has attained a CH (Liverpool) (a Master’s-level qualification from Liverpool, historically styled “CH”), and was awarded the OAM (Medal of the Order of Australia) in 2017.
When his career first took off, he was the only surgeon willing to travel to remote communities, providing essential care where others could not.
“All those years, the patients came first,” Dr Cook reflects.
“Some of the cases were straightforward, others a real puzzle…but every one mattered.”
And it was that patient-first care that saw him amass multiple degrees, honours, and accolades, becoming one of the region’s most highly respected doctors.
His journey began in England, where he trained rigorously before moving to Australia in 1973. After early roles at Princess Alexandra Hospital and Rockhampton Base Hospital, Dr Cook honed his skills in general surgery before specialising in orthopaedics.
“I liked orthopaedics more…it’s physical, visual, like solving a three-dimensional puzzle,” he explains.
“You put the pieces of bone together. Sometimes it’s simple, sometimes it’s extremely complex.”
Even after he left private practice in 2000, his expertise remained in demand through medical-legal work, assessing injuries for compensation claims. He remembers being challenged to predict long-term outcomes for patients, understanding not just their immediate injuries but what might develop 10 or 20 years down the line.
Yet, amid the seriousness of medicine, Dr Cook’s career was never without moments of levity. His career is filled with extraordinary moments, from treating a patient in Proserpine whose arm was bitten off by a pet crocodile named Charlene, to taking a life-threatening emergency flight to help a pregnant woman with her fifteenth child, whose toxic condition was so severe she endangered the passenger’s mid-air by putting the pilot in a chokehold.
He even recounts seeing a soldier who had been suffering from major headaches for decades, only to realise the patient was unknowingly carrying a bullet in his skull years after the war.
Mr Cook was so devoted to his patients, that often times he worked through nights and weekends.
“Sometimes you open the door after surgery and expect it to still be night…but it’d be blinding daylight,” he chuckles.
Behind the scenes, his wife Pam was his major support, managing the office, scheduling appointments, and keeping the whirlwind of regional surgeries and consultations organised for the past 15 years.
“I wouldn’t have been able to do it without her,” Dr Cook lovingly admits.
Their partnership, both professional and personal, now extends into retirement, where the couple will settle near Mackay Harbour and devote time to community causes, particularly domestic violence charity Broken Ballerina Inc.
As he steps away from the operating theatre, Dr Cook leaves behind not just a legacy of surgical skill, but a culture of care, humour, and humanity. For six decades, he has stitched bones, healed wounds, and touched lives. And now, he and Pam will trade the pace of the clinic for quiet mornings by the Mackay harbour, ready to write new chapters in a life that has already written so many.
Throughout Mackay and beyond, Dr Allan Cook’s name is synonymous with excellence, courage, and compassion. He’s a surgeon who didn’t just fix bones, but built a legacy all in the name of regional care.
Retiring orthopaedic surgeon Dr Allan Cook OAM celebrated 60 years of dedicated service to Mackay and regional Queensland, leaving a legacy of surgical skill, patient-first care, and unforgettable stories.
Mr Cook receiving his OAM in 2017. Photos supplied
Dr Allan Cook with beloved wife Pam Cook. Photo credit: Hannah McNamara