To say Rachel Staples has been through a lot is an understatement. She has battled and won against cancer, she has lost a teenage son and she has survived being hit by a car as a cyclist.
Despite it all, she has remained dedicated to helping others in need, and for her extraordinary efforts during the early and darkest days of the pandemic, she is now being recognized with the province’s second-highest honour.
In a virtual ceremony Thursday, Staples will receive the Medal of Good Citizenship. It’s in recognition of her efforts to ensure her dental practices were open and available to provide emergency dental services in Colwood, at a time when nearly every other practice was closed and grappling with how to deal with newly introduced public health restrictions.
“Dr. Staples’ willingness to unhesitatingly work to alleviate the suffering of dental emergencies is the very embodiment of the virtue of good citizenship; her selflessness and dedication to the community are a constant inspiration,” reads her award citation, released earlier this week. “In the early days of this pandemic, when so much was still unknown and terrifying, she did not hesitate once when someone asked for help.”
“I’m totally blown away by this award. It’s so nice you can feel appreciated in difficult times,” Staples, who also operates a dental clinic in downtown Victoria, said in an interview.
Knowing that a group of patients and staff nominated her for the award makes it more special, she added, but quickly pointed out that her mother Carol Ann Staples, who spent hours sewing at the age of 82 despite arthritis, also deserves credit.
Together, they made gowns and preemptively purchased personal protective equipment for the dental clinics, allowing them to reopen just 10 days after it and other dentist practices were closed by public health restrictions.
“We operated as an emergency clinic to help people avoid having to go to hospitals while they were dealing with COVID,” she said.
Staples said the award will certainly inspire her to continue helping others, especially when there are so many young people also receiving the award. She is currently developing plans to host a free dental work day at her Colwood clinic to help those who otherwise are not able to access dental care get some important work done.
“I think we don’t always know the story behind the face, and I think everybody deserves to be treated with dignity and respect, so we try to do that here every day.”