Hero photograph
Pete Warren, IBD patient from Northland
 
Photo by Crohn's & Colitis New Zealand Charitable Trust

Peter Warren featured in our video for World IBD Day 2022. Read his story here.

Peter Warren, Patient from Northland —

I was a normal Kiwi bloke working in my own business, mostly in the great outdoors. I played rugby, tennis, and squash, loved surfing, surf lifesaving, golf, was a keen fisherman, and a gardener with my wife.

I was working six days a week when suddenly I started to feel crook, wanting to sleep regularly throughout the day. My food and liquid intake slowed. My doctors asked me to provide stool samples as I reported blood.

Next thing I knew, I was admitted to hospital and was glad to be there because I felt dreadful. The first couple of days I hardly moved I was so sick, and, on the third day, I had my first colonoscopy. I made some improvement, but nobody could tell me what was wrong and, after 5 days, was sent home. At home I really went through a lot of pain and was almost writhing on the floor and so I ended back in the hospital. More checks and sent home again with some Pentasa Suppositories to shove up you know where. I think around this time somebody mentioned I had ulcerated colitis, but it wasn’t conclusive.

Also, my toileting started to change and I was going up to 20 times a day, and at night sleep was becoming interrupted. Initially I had some lucky escapes and just made the toilet on time and was discovering public toilets around the place that were frankly disgusting. I hated having to use them and, to this day, I have to depend on them.

I was 50 years old and work would look something like this every day: Drive to work, get out of my vehicle, feel it coming, drive home, have a shower and change into clean clothes and go again. We owned a National Lawn Mowing Franchise in Whangarei so I had quite a few franchisees as well as District Council contracts to manage.

I was getting sicker, each day was becoming a nightmare, the stress was building up, and I felt pressured. We had no support, and the National Franchiser soon gave us little choice but to sell the business that we had built up with such passion.

We struggled on for another year or so and I was eventually sent to Mercy Hospital in Auckland. I had a colonoscopy, and had my first of three operations there. They had to remove my large intestine as it was so diseased, and they had struggled to get it out without it breaking up. I had an Ileostomy which I thought was great. Although I had some accidents, generally I could cope with the bag.

However, while I was recuperating between the surgeries, we had no choice but to sell our beautiful dream home which we had built recently and from which we had been operating our business. We were financially under the hammer so had little option.

Six weeks after the first surgery, I had a second surgery which didn’t go so well. In that surgery, they shifted the stoma and created the J-pouch from my small intestine. Apparently, it was a tricky and intense operation and, back in Whangarei, I was soon admitted to Northland Base Hospital with an infection that had to be surgically removed. The Mercy Hospital surgeon had left me with a stoma site that was level with my abdomen. It never healed. For the six weeks, every time I emptied the bag, the pain was excruciating. I couldn’t wait to go back to Mercy Hospital for the third and final surgery and almost ran into the theatre to get it fixed.

My J-pouch was connected, and I thought all would be good from there. When I got home, I had another infection, so more surgery to remove the infection, then I had 7 months of visits to district nurses for dressing changes as the wound had to heal from the inside.

All through this process I felt so alone many times and thought I was the only person to have this problem. Calling it what it is has been an issue for me and when I have spoken to people, I find they don’t want to know. Most have no idea of such a disease and, to be fair, neither did I until I went down with it.

When I was discharged from the hospitals there was never any advice or follow up and I just winged it. I would talk to my GP when things were getting tough and get a referral back to the hospital surgeon. When I had private medical insurance, it was easier to get things done, but it became unaffordable, so I am now reliant on the public system.

I’m 71 years now and have lived with this disease for 22 years. I keep telling myself it will get better, but even today I have lost count of how many times I have had to go to the toilet. My wife and I limit ourselves to where we go and what we can do. It limits our social life and makes travelling difficult, but we are determined not to let it stop us. We are grateful for our faith which, in these very desperate tough times, has been a source of comfort for us.

This disease is such a silent destroyer of everyday lives and patients have to put up with so much.

Since finding CCNZ, I have found a whole new wealth of knowledge and support.  I have been so inspired, that, my wife and I, Jennie, are going to revitalise the support group in Whangarei.  Please follow our Facebook page to keep up to date with any upcoming events.


To watch Pete's video from World IBD Day, Click here.