Being stuck in hospital over the festive season, when all you really want is your two front teeth and to be home with family, is not everyone’s idea of a great Christmas.
Dunedin Hospital physiotherapist Felicity Brown had bought tickets to fly home to Sydney to spend Christmas with her family, but then Covid-19 re-emerged in Australia's biggest city.
Marie-Theressa Dobier had a choice yesterday — sit around her rest-home dinner table having Christmas dinner with "the same old people", or go out and meet some new ones.
Demand for packages at some southern foodbanks is up to four times higher than during previous festive seasons, and one facility is warning the main wave is still to hit the city.
The new Dunedin Hospital build is about to move to the next stage, following the announcement of a new executive steering group (ESG) by the Ministry of Health.
The Ministry of Health has announced the make-up of the new executive steering group which will support the new Dunedin Hospital project through the next stages.
It may not have been the University of Otago graduation ceremony that students had anticipated, but that mattered little when about 700 graduands set off on a parade around the university on Saturday.
When the engine on MV Monarch cut out suddenly in the middle of the Otago Harbour channel on Saturday, there was a moment of confusion, and then all the children on board started screaming.
A handful of drivers have been given an early "Christmas present" in the form of a warning from police about their speeding on Dunedin’s Northern Motorway.