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Regulators Removing Health Workforce Cultural Safety Risks Clinical Safety

Regulators Removing Health Workforce Cultural Safety Risks Clinical Safety

Scoop30-04-2025
Te Tiratu - Latest News [Page 1]
Not The Time To Retreat — It's Time To Double Down More >>
Bringing The Smile Back To Taumarunui: Te Tiratū Iwi Māori Partnership Board Calls For Urgent Action On Dental Equity
Monday, 14 April 2025, 3:22 pm | Te Tiratu
It offered a range of on-the-spot services that included cardiac/diabetes/cancer screening, an eye clinic, immunisations, gall bladder/hernia/haemorrhoid banding specialists, to skin lesion clinics. More >>
Te Tiratū Iwi Māori Partnership Board Hosts Inaugural Forum With Health Providers To Strengthen Whānau Voices In Waikato
Thursday, 10 April 2025, 10:28 am | Te Tiratu
The hui is a vital step in realising the aspirations of the Pae Ora (Healthy Futures) Act, which mandates IMPBs to bring the voices of whānau directly into the heart of Te Whatu Ora Health New Zealand planning and decision-making. More >>
Largest Iwi Māori Partnership Board Welcomes Bowel Screening Expansion & Calls For Māori-Focused Equity In Access
Friday, 7 March 2025, 9:46 am | Te Tiratu
'Screening is an essential tool for prevention and early detection, and expanding access will definitely save lives,' said Hagen Tautari, co-chair Te Tiratū Iwi Māori Partnership Board. More >>
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Auckland primary school teacher Aimee-Rose Yates dies following bowel cancer battle
Auckland primary school teacher Aimee-Rose Yates dies following bowel cancer battle

NZ Herald

time12 hours ago

  • NZ Herald

Auckland primary school teacher Aimee-Rose Yates dies following bowel cancer battle

The 32-year-old's brother Mark Mallard posted a tribute to his sister on Facebook, calling her a 'rare soul' with 'laughter, love, and an infectious zest for life'. Auckland primary school teacher Aimee-Rose Yates, a bowel cancer awareness advocate, has died at the age of 32. Photo / Elm Park School 'Aimee lived with us during her final years of high school, and those moments were filled with the kind of warmth only she could bring,' he wrote. 'She chased her dream of becoming a teacher with passion and purpose, and in doing so, she touched the lives of countless children. 'If her impact on them was even half of what she gave to [her nephew] Thomas, then New Zealand has a bright future ahead.' Elm Park School said Yates was known for her kindness, dedication and 'the special way she connected with students and staff alike'. 'Her passion for education, unwavering positivity, and the care she showed to every child will always be remembered,' the school posted on Facebook. 'This is a significant loss for our school whānau. We extend our heartfelt condolences to her husband, Aaron, and Aimee-Rose's family, friends, and all who had the privilege of knowing and working with her. 'Rest in peace, Aimee-Rose. You will be dearly missed and forever remembered.' During a 2023 election debate, Yates challenged then Opposition leader Christopher Luxon and Prime Minister Chris Hipkins to lower the national bowel cancer screening age from 60 years old. Every year, more than 3300 New Zealanders are diagnosed with bowel cancer and more than 1200 die from the disease. In December last year, the Government terminated plans for Māori and Pacific people, who are at higher risk of the disease, to access screening at 50 years old. In March, it announced the screening age would be lowered from 60 to 58 for all New Zealanders, with the change taking place on a regional basis from October this year.

New med school to save $50m a year, govt claims
New med school to save $50m a year, govt claims

Otago Daily Times

time15 hours ago

  • Otago Daily Times

New med school to save $50m a year, govt claims

Nearly $2billion could be saved by 2042 if a new medical school to train rural doctors is created in Hamilton, the detailed business case for the project says. Made public at 6.45pm yesterday, a document dump including the business case reveals the cost of producing GPs at a new medical school at the University of Waikato would be $50million a year cheaper than doing it through existing medical schools. It was announced on Monday the government had decided to approve the country's third medical school, to be built in Hamilton. Over 16 years from 2026 to 2042 the total cost of medical education at Waikato, including capital costs that include building a new school, would be $9.1b, it says. It would cost $10.9b over the same period to increase the intake of students at existing medical schools and $10.2b if a new medical training programme focused on rural health, jointly run by the universities of Otago and Auckland was established. The Waikato option would also be the cheapest for the Crown in terms of its ongoing contribution to operating costs at $37.2m a year, compared with $45.5m a year for increasing intake at existing medical schools. But there are concerns the actual costs are still unknown. Green MP Francisco Hernandez said the government's decision to "dump" the business case after work hours on a Friday was "deeply insulting to the public". "This is not the actions of a government that is confident in the business case — and judging from what I've read so far they're right to not be," he said. Rather than engaging in good faith with Otago and Auckland universities and running an open process for a new graduate programme, the government had "deliberately stacked the deck to produce the outcome they want". "The cost benefit analysis also assumes no further cost escalations — and with the Minister [of Health] refusing to rule out further funding — we just don't know how deep the government's blank cheque will extend to back this flawed proposal," Mr Hernandez said. "Finally, the cost benefit analysis fails to even consider the issue of [the] benefits of training more Māori or Pasifika doctors — perhaps because [Waikato University] vice-chancellor [Neil] Quigley has reportedly ruled out a programme like [Māori and Pacific Admission Scheme] to boost Māori and Pasifika doctors and the government has failed to make that a condition of this handout." Dunedin MP Rachel Brooking said the Waikato medical school was pitched to the National Party as a "present" to them when in office. "Decisions about the future of New Zealand's medical workforce should be made on more robust grounds," she said. "It's important we take the time to analyse the business case before commenting, which we will do in due course." Taieri MP Ingrid Leary said she was not surprised information was redacted from the business case. "I've got numerous official information documents that are heavily redacted and I'm concerned but not surprised that this remains the pattern [of the government]." She said she felt it had been shown the new medical school was "effectively a done deal" well before the public announcement, due to the government's coalition agreements. "The timing of the release of critical documents on a significant issue is deeply cynical and, along with the heavy redactions, makes me wonder what the National government is trying to hide?"

More support needed for rural Māori looking after whānau with dementia, researchers say
More support needed for rural Māori looking after whānau with dementia, researchers say

RNZ News

time15 hours ago

  • RNZ News

More support needed for rural Māori looking after whānau with dementia, researchers say

Dr Makarena Dudley. Photo: University of Auckland / Supplied Too many rural Māori whānau are caring for loved ones with dementia - or mate wareware - without support, diagnosis or the information they need, according to two leading brain researchers. Sir Richard Faull, director of the Centre for Brain Research at the University of Auckland, and deputy director, Māori, Dr Makarena Dudley, say Māori and Pacific people are affected by dementia more than any other group. They spoke to Nine to Noon about travelling around the country visiting marae sharing information and hearing stories. So far they've held hui at marae in the Far North and Whanganui, and more are planned. Dudley said the goal is to reach out to all Māori communities, particularly those in remote areas, to share information about the condition and gather the kōrero of caregivers. "Some of these caregivers are desperate for support, they're caring for sometimes loved ones who are exhibiting very challenging behaviours. Looking after somebody who has mate wareware particularly in the more severe stages of the condition can be extremely challenging and often even amongst Māori families that responsibility is often left to one person." Providing support for caregivers is one of the major parts of this program, Dudley said, many are isolated in rural areas and don't know where to turn to for help. "There was an international study done actually across a number of nations that caregivers often die more than the person they are tending to." Aotearoa is in the midst of conducting a nationwide prevalence study, which has another year to go, but once it's finished there will be accurate data about the extent of dementia among Māori, she said. The goal of travelling around to marae is to reach out to all Māori communities to give them information about dementia and listen to their experiences with the condition, she said. "Then we can take that information back with us and decide okay so here are the issues, here are the problems, how are we going to address this, how are we going to help to fix this and so we've visited around about 25 marae so far. .. we've spoken to hundreds of kaumātua, we've listened to their stories, some of them quite heartbreaking. "One of the main themes that's come across from all these visits is that there is a profound lack of information available to the Māori community and more so for those who are living more remotely not only is there a lack of information but there are virtually no services available to them." The Centre for Brain Research is currently funding a program to support caregivers in Ahipara, Dudley said so far its been a success and it's service that doesn't require a lot of funding. Dudley has also helped develop an app to help Māori affected by dementia. The app provides all the basic information a whānau might want to know about dementia, she said. The app provides all the basic information a whānau might want to know about dementia. Photo: supplied Faull said the ethos of the Centre for Brain Research is not only to do research but communicate that research to people and then listen to them. Faull said it's a privilege to go out to marae to listen to people and put that ethos into action. "We are actually seeing an absence of services in so many ways, this is for Māori and non-Māori, but especially for Māori so that's why it's important for us to go out and tell them about the risk factors." If you address the risk factors you can reduce the prevalence of Alzheimer's by about 60 percent, he said, so communicating that to people on the ground is vitally important. Sir Richard Faull. Photo: University of Auckland / CBR Dudley said when developing a model for treating dementia that resonates with Māori they need to use the information from both knowledge bases, western science and mātauranga. "They need to know information from both worlds." "Because there is a lot of information out there now but Māori don't really buy into it, it doesn't resonate with them because its not in their speak, it's not familiar to them the language that is used the way it is introduced to them." The Centre for Brain Research is currently working to produce a model that works for Māori, she said, once that happens she believes progress will be made in reducing incidents of dementia. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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