2019 PHARMAC Tapuhi Kaitiaki Awards presented
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The Tapuhi Kaitiaki Awards were presented tonight during the Awards Dinner at the Indigenous Nurses Aotearoa Conference
at the Pullman Hotel, Tāmaki Makaurau (Auckland).
The Awards are now in their second year and are one way in which PHARMAC supports Te Rūnanga of Aoteaoroa, NZNO to
develop the Māori nursing workforce to achieve the best health outcomes. They are also to recognise the positive
influence Māori nurses have on whānau and the role they play as key influencers of health.
The Tapuhi Kaitiaki Awards are in two categories, with winners sharing a $10,000.00 prize in each category.
Category 1 - Nurse Practitioner/Nurse Prescriber - acknowledges Māori nurses who are on a professional development
journey to become a nurse prescriber to advance their clinical practice and expertise.
Jo Clark-Fairclough (Te Rarawa, Ngā Puhi, Ngāti Paoa) is a practice nurse at Te Hiku Hauora, a Māori iwi provider in
Kaitāia, and one winner in this category. She says her motivation to become a nurse prescriber came from a lack of GP
hours within the clinics she works at.
"This is a real barrier to young Māori receiving timely health care, and my becoming a nurse prescriber will improve
health outcomes for our high Māori populations within Te Tai Tokerau."
The other three winners in this category were:
- Pirihira Puata (Ngai Takoto) a Nurse Prescriber at Mana Kidz, a free, nurse-led, school-based programme in the
Counties Manukau Health region
- Eve Pogai (Ngāti Kahungungu) a Practice Nurse on the Nurse Practitioner Pathway who works at Kids in the Hawke’s Bay
- Aroha Ruha-Hiraka (Ngāti Awa, Tuwharetoa, Te Arawa, Tūhoe, Taranaki) a Practice Nurse on the Nurse Practitioner
pathway working at Kawerau Medical Centre in the Bay of Plenty.
Category 2 - Māori Nurse Mātauranga - acknowledges nurses and tauira who wish to further their study and/or develop an
innovative way to help whānau, hapū and iwi to access and understand their medicines.
One recipient in this category was Tamarah Thomason-Tata, (Rongowhakaata), a third year Bachelor of Nursing student at
the Eastern Institute of Technology. She says she was quite surprised to receive this award, but that she feels very
privileged and grateful to be a recipient.
"Awards like these help encourage Māori to excel in their chosen fields, whilst providing them financial means to
further themselves. For myself these funds will go towards my student loan and state final exams - stepping stones to
further my education and career."
The other winners in this category were:
- Tumanako Bidois (Ngāti Rangiwewehi) who is completing her final year, Bachelor of Nursing at the University of
Auckland
- Serene Morrell (Ngāti Kahungunu), a First year Bachelor of Nursing student at the Eastern Institute of Technology
- Tracy Black (Ngai Tūhoe, Ngāti Kahungunu, Te Whakatohea), a third year Māori nursing student at Te Whare Wānanga o
Awanuiārangi
- Logan Murray, (Te Rarawa), a second year Bachelor of Medicine/Bachelor of Surgery student at the University of Otago.
ENDS