Māori lead the way for Bowel Screening Programme
Thursday 25 July
Māori lead the way for participation in Southern DHB’s National Bowel Screening Programme
Māori residents are participating in the Southern DHB’s National Bowel Screening Programme in higher numbers than other locals, with Māori participation rates equaling or exceeding overall participation every month since the programme began in April 2018.
“We believe the
Southern DHB’s National Bowel Screening Programme has the
highest indigenous participation of any national bowel
screening programme in the world,” says Programme Manager,
Emma Bell. “It’s wonderful that so many Māori are
taking part and being proactive about their bowel
health.”
As at the end of April 2019, the overall Southern participation rate was 72%, above the national average of 62% and the target of 60%. Māori participation in the South is also 72%, sitting 16% higher than the national average of 56%.
“The strong partnerships forged between the Southern bowel screening programme and community-based Māori health providers have played a large part in helping to achieve this outcome,” says Emma Bell.
Chief Executive of provider Nga Kete Matauranga Pounamu, Tracey Wright-Tawha, says it has been a pleasure to partner in this collaborative approach to raising awareness of bowel screening.
“Whānau is everything, and in sharing the key messages – be it over a cuppa, as part of an event, with a giggle or a shared tear – we can engage whānau to complete the test, we can make a difference, and we can save lives,” she says. “Connections and relationships are vital, empowering and enabling. Together, we are united to ensure the word goes far and wide into our Māori communities and homes, to the places our people gather – mīharo! We have got this!”
In addition,
Māori community members have generously become bowel
screening ‘champions’: Colac Bay kuia, Shona
Fordyce The latest Māori champion is Invercargill
resident, Mooney
Ngatuere According to the Ministry of Health,
people diagnosed with early stage bowel cancer who receive
treatment early, have a 90% chance of long-term
survival. The Southern DHB National Bowel Screening
Programme is free for those aged 60-74 who are eligible for
publicly funded health care. In its first year, to April
2019, it has detected 68 cases of bowel cancer and 737 cases
of polyps, which can develop into cancer over time. The
National Bowel Screening Programme is now live in Waitemata,
Counties-Manukau, Lakes, Hawkes Bay, Hutt Valley, Wairarapa,
Nelson-Marlborough and Southern DHBs. The national roll out
of the programme is expected to be completed by mid-June
2021. The National Bowel Screening Programme About bowel cancer in New
Zealand * New Zealand has one of the highest rates of
bowel cancer in the developed world * According to the Ministry of Health, people
diagnosed with early stage bowel cancer who receive
treatment early, have a 90% chance of long-term
survival.
*
Screening can detect pre-cancerous polyps, or cancer at an
early stage when it can often be successfully treated
*
It is free of charge for people aged 60 to 74 years of age
who are eligible for public healthcare
* Invitations
for those eligible to participate are sent through the mail,
followed by a test kit
* The kits are easy and simple
to do, and samples are returned by mail for testing
*
People are being asked to make sure their details are up to
date with their GP so they don’t miss out
* If any
member of the public notices potential symptoms – such as
a change in their normal bowel habit that continues for
several weeks, or blood in a bowel motion – they should
see their GP right away, not wait for their screening
test.
* For more information visit
timetoscreen.nz
* More than 3000
New Zealanders are diagnosed with bowel cancer each year and
more than 1,200 die from it annually
* Bowel cancer
is the second most common cause of cancer death in this
country
ENDS