Gabi Hollows


Gabi Hollows AO is one of Australia's 100 Living Treasures. She was also given the Advance Australia Award for Community Service, and was made Paul Harris Fellow by Rotary International.

Early life

Hollows was a born in Newcastle, New South Wales, and raised on an orchard near Gosford on the Central Coast of New South Wales. She first became interested in medicine when she had eye surgery at the age of three.

Career

In 1972 she graduated as an Orthoptist from the NSW School of Orthoptics specialising in disorders of eye movements and associated vision problems. During her orthoptic training, she met Fred Hollows. and joined him on the National Trachoma and Eye Health Program, which aimed to survey and treat Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians across the country eye conditions including trachoma. Over a period of three years, they visited over 465 remote communities and treated more than 100,000 people. They married in 1980 and had five children. She worked with Fred until his death in 1993, and continued his work afterwards through The Fred Hollows Foundation, both overseas and in Australia. In 1996, she married lawyer John Balazs.

Honours

In 2001 she was awarded the Centenary Medal for services to community welfare and development.
In the 2013 Queens Birthday Honours List, Gabi Hollows was made an Officer of the Order of Australia "For distinguished service to public health as an advocate for the eradication of blindness, particularly for Indigenous Australians and people in the developing world."

Footnotes