Engage Aotearoa

Category Archives: Physical Health

WINZ Reviewing How They Work with People with Disabilities and Health Conditions

WINZ is seeking your views on how to assist disabled people and people with health conditions into work.

As part of the Government’s wider review of the welfare system, Work and Income is developing proposals for changing the way it works with disabled clients and clients with a health condition or mental-health condition.

To ensure the new approach is well-grounded we want people to share their views about what it will take to assist these jobseekers into work. Please go to www.msd.govt.nz/healthanddisability to share your views. This survey will be open to 5pm on Thursday 31 January.

The feedback will contribute to the development of proposals to be in place from 15 July 2013, and to a longer term work programme to assist disabled people and people with a health condition who can work, to have the opportunity to achieve that.

WINZ have held two public meetings and six sector workshops in November and December 2012.

There will also be an additional public workshop in Wellington on Thursday 31 January 2013 at St John’s Church hall (cnr Willis and Dixon Streets), 9.30 am to midday.  If you are interested in attending this meeting, please RSVP to msd_events@msd.govt.nz, and also advise any assistance you may need to enable you to participate.

If you have any questions, please contact Anne Hawker on 04 978 4142 or Sacha O’Dea on 04 916 3883. Alternatively you can email Anne.Hawker011@msd.govt.nz or Sacha.ODea001@msd.govt.nz

Recent Research Online

1 in 5 Kiwis Experienced Stress in the Past Year

The latest Roy Morgan survey shows that 628,000 – or one in five – New Zealanders over 14 have experienced stress in the past year

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/lifestyle/news/article.cfm?c_id=6&objectid=10850085

The relationship between adult learning and wellbeing: evidence from the 1958 National Child Development Study

In terms of the contribution of lifelong learning to wellbeing and health-related outcomes, we find that there is evidence of statistically significant and robust effects of participation in lifelong learning.

www.bis.gov.uk/assets/biscore/further-education-skills/docs/r/12-1241-relationship-adult-learning-and-wellbeing-evidence-1958.pdf

The cost of child health inequalities in Aotearoa New Zealand: A preliminary scoping study

This preliminary study suggests that health sector spending is skewed towards non-Maori children despite evidence of greater Māori need. Eliminating child health inequities, particularly in primary care access, could result in significant economic benefits for New Zealand.

www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22640030

Metro-Auckland Pacific population health profile

The Pacific population health-profile presented in this report provides a “snapshot” of Pacific health in metro-Auckland. www.hiirc.org.nz/page/36556

Media Reporting of Global Health Issues and Events in New Zealand Daily Newspapers

Global health has received considerable attention over the past 20 years, with increased investment from some governments, nongovernment organisations and private philanthropists.

www.healthpromotion.org.au/journal/journal-downloads/article/1-hpja/435…

Risk Factors for Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome

Antipsychotic dose escalation as a trigger for Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome (NMS): literature review and case series report
Langan J, Martin D, Shajahan P, Smith DJ

BMC Psychiatry 2012, 12:214 (29 November 2012)
[Abstract] [Provisional PDF]

 

Newsletter from The New Zealand Organisation for Rare Disorders

NZORD – the New Zealand Organisation for Rare Disorders

NZORD Newsletter 2012 #6 — 28 November 2012

In this issue:

1 – Putting patient and family interests into newborn screening criteria.

2 – Common themes as groups respond to Ministry consultation on payments to family carers.

3 – Two significant clinical trials with New Zealand connections.

4 – Plain packaging submission to Ministry of Health tobacco control team.

5 – Recommended reading: The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, by Rebecca Skloot.

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1 – Putting patient and family interests into newborn screening criteria.

Over a decade of NZORD’s advocacy for patient and family interests in health policy has taught us that talking the language of officials and professionals is an important step in having our messages taken seriously. So NZORD took the lead in publishing how family interests and ethics must influence screening policy. See Screening criteria: the need to deal with new developments and ethical issues in newborn metabolic screening. We are proud to have the valued support of the Save Babies Through Screening Foundations in the USA and UK, and the Genetic Alliance in the USA, in the preparation of this article, along with valued help from two New Zealand academics with editing and technical aspects.

The article is published online in the Journal of Community Genetics, October 2012. We propose that decision criteria for metabolic screening in the newborn period should be adapted to specifically include patient and family interests, community values, patients’ rights, duties of government and healthcare providers, and ethical arguments for action in the face of uncertainty. Here is an open access PDF version of the article.

2 – Common themes as groups respond to Ministry consultation on payments to family carers.

The Ministry of Health’s consultation on payments to family carers has now closed and decisions will be made over the next few months. Wide ranging discussions took place among support groups during the consultation period and there was widespread concern at themes contained in the Ministry’s document.

NZORD is concerned that the Ministry’s defeat on this issue at the Human Rights Review Tribunal, and in two major court cases, has negatively influenced the policy direction they are signalling, and even suggests an attempt to relitigate the case through the policy setting process. This is very disappointing. Family carers deserve a more respectful process that is based on sound principles. Read more about a better approach to this policy issue in the submissions made by the Carers Alliance and also by NZORD.

3 – Two significant clinical trials with New Zealand connections.

Possibly missed by many in the constant stream of news about research activities under way, is a planned new clinical trial by NZ-based Neuren Pharmaceuticals who specialise in drugs for brain injury and neurodegeneration. They have successfully completed a phase 1 safety trial and submitted for approval of their candidate drug NNZ-2566 for a phase 2 trial for Rett syndrome, a very rare neurodegenerative condition. It is exciting to see such projects emerging from New Zealand universities, and also great to see attention being paid to rare conditions. Read more in the Neuren press release.

Also this month, Living Cell Technologies received approval for a clinical trial of its porcine cell encapsulation technology for the treatment of Parkinson’s disease. This follows successful earlier trails of the same technology for the treatment of unstable diabetes. Read more about the ongoing diabetes trial. This is another project where the innovation and basic research originated in New Zealand.

4 – Plain packaging submission to Ministry of Health tobacco control team.

NZORD supports the introduction of plain tobacco packaging and the other recommendations set out in the proposal under consultation by the Ministry of Health. We support this proposal because the health outcomes of tobacco use, exert an indirect but significant impact on the rare disease population. Smoking is a significant risk factor for a range of diseases that are high on health priority lists and therefore take a significant slice of the health budget. As a result, patients with rare diseases are pushed further down the priority list. Here is our submission in Word and PDF.

5 – Recommended reading: The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, by Rebecca Skloot.

Her name was Henrietta Lacks, but scientists know her as HeLa. She was a poor Southern tobacco farmer who worked the same land as her slave ancestors, yet her cells—taken without her knowledge—became one of the most important tools in medicine. HeLa cells were vital for developing the polio vaccine; uncovered secrets of cancer, viruses, and the atom bomb’s effects; helped lead to important advances like in vitro fertilization, cloning, and gene mapping; and have been bought and sold by the billions.

Yet Henrietta Lacks remains virtually unknown, buried in an unmarked grave. Henrietta’s family did not learn of her “immortality” until more than twenty years after her death, when scientists investigating HeLa began using her husband and children in research without informed consent. And though the cells had launched a multimillion-dollar industry that sells human biological materials, her family never saw any of the profits. As Rebecca Skloot so brilliantly shows, the story of the Lacks family—past and present—is inextricably connected to the dark history of experimentation on African Americans, the birth of bioethics, and the legal battles over whether we control the stuff we are made of.

Intimate in feeling, astonishing in scope, and impossible to put down, The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks captures the beauty and drama of scientific discovery, as well as its human consequences. Read more about Henrietta in Wikipedia. The book is available at Amazon.

Contact:

John Forman

Executive Director, NZORD

New Zealand Organisation for Rare Disorders

PO Box 38-538, Wellington Mail Centre, 5045

228 Tinakori Rd, Thorndon, Wellington, 6011

New Zealand

Ph +64 4 471 2226

Mob +64 27 240 3377

Email: exec.director@nzord.org.nz

Website: www.nzord.org.nz

Consumer Collaboration of Aotearoa Strengthens Input to Health and Disability Sector

The Consumer Collaboration of Aotearoa is a fairly new group set up and supported by the Health and Quality Safety Commission to provide consumer input to services and any other interested parties. It is a collaboration of consumer groups from the whole health and disability sector, not only mental health.

If you are not already, your organisation is strongly encouraged (provided it fits the definition of ‘consumer’ organisation) to join up. Individuals can join as ‘associate’ members if they are not with an organisation as such.

What do organisations get for their free membership of the CCA?

  • An information centre for information about consumer organisations
  • ‘Go to’ group/website for consumer reps and other stakeholders
  • Opportunity to retain your organisations own identity but act collaboratively
  • You can profile your organisation on the CCA website Invite organisations to upload their profiles to CCA website

They had an AGM at the end of October and have produced a newsletter outlining the details.

To find out more

  • Visit the website

 http://consumercollaboration.org.nz

  • Email Darcey Jane, Project Manager, Consumer Collaboration of Aotearoa

Darcey@kites.org.nz

Nationwide Subsidised Gym Memberships to Get NZ Active!

Celebrities say WTF?! about suicide among LGBT youth

Everyone deserves to be treated with respect – More than 30 of New Zealand’s leading celebrities come together in this Rainbow Youth and Outline campaign to ask New Zealand to stand together and say WTF?! .

Watch the video and share with your friends!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=2D_4JwQ2Fug

Youth Mental-Health News from YouthworX

Youth Mental Health Package Unveiled by Prime Minster:   Last week the Prime Minister unveiled a $62 million package of initiatives focusing on youth mental health. The package details how Government will improve services for young people with, or at risk of, mild to moderate mental health problems. The initiatives will be of interest to many people and organisations working in the community sector who deal with the consequences of unmet mental health needs, which can involve families, schools and communities as well as the young people themselves.  The initiatives will include a focus on making primary health care more youth friendly with interim support for Youth One Stop Shops.  The finer details are still in development and the Ministries are consulting with key people in the sector.  The initiative also increases the number of youth workers in low decile schools.

Youth workers will be placed in schools in South Auckland, Porirua and Flaxmere that don’t already have Multi Agency Support Services in Secondary Schools. Youth workers will be employed by Child, Youth and Family preferred providers who will be required to go through a tendering and contracting process.  There will be 9 new youth workers in 2012/13 and 10 more in 2013/14.  Youth workers will be required to have a level 6 qualification.

Full fact sheet information is available here:

http://www.beehive.govt.nz/sites/all/files/Youth_Mental_Health_project-School_Based_Initiatives.pdf

http://www.beehive.govt.nz/sites/all/files/Youth_Mental_Health_project-Health_Sector.pdf

http://www.beehive.govt.nz/sites/all/files/Youth_Mental_Health_project-Family_and_Community.pdf

http://www.beehive.govt.nz/sites/all/files/Youth_Mental_Health_project-Online_initiatives.pdf

Whanau Ora: A Strengths Based Approach to Youth Mental Health:  The Minister for Whānau Ora, Tariana Turia, has welcomed the recognition that Whānau Ora is intimately linked to the drive to improve youth mental health. “Whānau Ora, at its heart, is about whānau, aiga or families coming together to support each other through building shared aspirations, and working together to achieve those aspirations,” said Mrs Turia.  Read the media release http://www.beehive.govt.nz/release/wh%C4%81nau-ora-strengths-based-approach-youth-mental-health

Youth Smoking Hits Record Low:   ASH Smoking Survey shows a record drop in youth smoking – especially among Maori girls. The overall rate of youth smoking has dropped one-and-a-half percent to 4.1% (from 5.5% in 2010), the largest drop in almost a decade. Read the full report here:  http://www.beehive.govt.nz/release/youth-smoking-hits-record-low

Public Sector Targets:  The Government has announced a set of 10 new targets for the public sector over the next three to five years. These have implications for children, young people, and people working with them.  For more information see http://beehive.govt.nz/sites/all/files/The_Prime_Minister%27s_results_for_New_Zealanders.pdf

Health of Maori Children and Young People with Chronic Conditions and Disabilities:  The report provides an overview of secondary health service utilisation patterns for Māori children and young people with chronic conditions and disabilities. To read the report see http://www.health.govt.nz/publication/health-maori-children-and-young-people-chronic-conditions-and-disabilities

Families Commission – Teen Pregnancy – New Report:  A recent report on teen pregnancy in New Zealand makes recommendations aimed at providing more support, choice and opportunity for young parents. To download and view the report go http://www.familiescommission.org.nz/research/parenting/teenage-pregnancy-and-parenting

Payment Rate Increases:  From 1 April 2012 there will be a 1.77% increase to: rates and thresholds for main benefits, Student Allowances, Student Loan Living Costs and the Foster Care Allowance, rates and thresholds for some supplementary assistance, thresholds for the Community Services Card.  A 2.65% increase will apply to rates of New Zealand Superannuation.  Read more here http://www.msd.govt.nz/about-msd-and-our-work/newsroom/media-releases/2012/payment-changes-for-april-2012.html


Terms of Reference for the Children’s Commission Experts Advisory Group on Solutions for Child Poverty

FYI: The Children’s Commission Experts Advisory Group on Children’s Poverty has released their terms of reference for their search for proposed solutions to child poverty in New Zealand.

Click here to open a copy of the full report.

Home Insulation Programmes

There are currently two Home Insulation programmes on offer to help ensure people are living in healthy homes:

Snug homes:

This completely FREE initiative is open to those who own their home or are privately renting (sorry no Housing NZ homes), and have a Community services card. The application form is quick and easy and is downloadable off their website.  You can also call them and they will send you an application with a self addressed envelope.

http://www.ecoinsulation.co.nz/energywise/snug-homes

Retrofit your home programme:

Auckland Council provides a loan scheme for home owners, where you are able to borrow up to $5000 to insulate and heat your home, which is paid back through your rates over 9 years.

http://www.aucklandcouncil.govt.nz/en/buildingpropertyconsents/retrofit/pages/home.aspx

Tree Planting Expeditions with Kaipatiki Bush Project

WHY SIT HOME AND FREEZE? – GET OUT AND PLANT TREES!

Kaipatiki Project Environment Centre warmly invites the community to come and plant native trees in Eskdale Reserve Network this winter.

Members of local churches, schools, community groups and business are welcome to join forces with local people in these family-friendly events – and there is a free barbecue for all planters.

Bring gumboots, a spade if you have one and lots of enthusiasm!

  • Sat 2 June, 9.30am-12.30pm: Frances Kendall Reserve, Kaipatiki Road (near Kaipatiki bridge), Glenfield
  • Sat 7 July, 9.30am-12.30pm: Domain Road, corner Domain & Glenfield Rds, Glenfield
  • Sat 4 August, 9.30am-12.30pm: Eskdale Reserve (Cemetery end), Glenfield Road, Glenfield
  • Sat 1 September, 9.30am-12.30pm: Eskdale Reserve (near Cemetery), Eskdale Road, Glenfield

Enquiries: ph 482 1172

email: coordinator@kaipatiki.org.nz

Website: www.kaipatiki.org.nz/volunteer