Waipareira brings Saliva Testing to the community
For over 12 months, questions have been asked over why
saliva testing has not been rolled out as a proven
methodology to test for Covid-19, and its variants.
Nasal
swabbing is invasive and places our swabbing staff at
greater proximity for long periods to those getting
tested
On that basis over 250 Whānau Waipareira staff
and essential workers will be tested on Thursday using
saliva technology.
Following the Waipareira trial, we will
look to take our learnings to our Whānau Ora networks
because the uplifting of vials with saliva in them does not
require costly GPs or nursing staff in terms of the numbers
required for nasal swabbing.
This means you can process
far more people and ensure that lines and waiting times are
even. It’s about the patient, not the practice.
This
will require the Ministry of Health and the Government to
engage in a large communications programme educating the
knowledge and requirements to help a robust testing
regime.
We look forward to bringing long overdue technology to our community because of a health administration that in many ways is still designed for the industrial age.
We cannot have bureaucrats clogging the system with multiple fire doors and multiple hands slowly or stopping our services that are trying to improve lives for Kiwis.
Whānau Waipareira will be used as an incubator and
pilot in hosting and deploying a range of cutting edge
products in the health, welfare and education.
We will
roll out through the Whanau Ora Providers and Collectives to
scale up the saliva testing.
We are proud to be associated with a test that was used by the New Zealand Olympic Team, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare Workforce, Genesis Energy and Air New Zealand.
If it’s good enough for them, it’s good
enough for
everyone.