Foodstuffs announces partnership with The Gut Foundation
Nine New Zealanders are diagnosed with bowel cancer
every day and Foodstuffs South Island wants to help stop the
progression of the second most prevalent disease killing
Kiwis.
The Foodstuffs (South Island) Community Trust
is delighted to announce a major new sponsorship partnership
with the Gut Foundation from February 2020. The charitable
organisation was chosen from over thirty applicants by the
Trust for the three-year grant.
While gut disease is
increasing worldwide, it is particularly prevalent across
New Zealand’s South Island. The announcement from the
Foodstuffs trust to work in partnership with the Gut
Foundation (formerly the Bowel and Liver Trust) follows some
worrying figures around gut and bowel
disorders.
“There is considerable synergy between
the Gut Foundation and Foodstuffs, so it made sense for us
to use our trust to help fund research and community
awareness for a cause which affects so many people,” says
Steve Anderson, CEO Foodstuffs South Island. “We have
stores in every part of the South Island, so the Trust can
help support community-grounded initiatives and
education.”
One of the keys to providing the best
care for South Islanders is to encourage local researchers
to study the causes and treatment of gut diseases.
Christchurch gut researchers have led the world in
developing cures for hepatitis C and other liver diseases,
and the trust is supporting new diagnostic equipment to
manage common conditions such as gastro-oesophageal reflux
and gallstone disease.
The situation isn’t just a
South Island problem, however, with nine New Zealanders
diagnosed with bowel cancer every day. Of these, three will
die, making bowel cancer our second-highest cause of death.
By the age of 75, New Zealanders have a one in 17 chance of
having bowel disease, and there is a significant increase in
inflammatory bowel diseases in people between the ages of 15
and 35.
“We are seeing increasing rates of gut
disease in New Zealand at all ages, with more inflammatory
bowel diseases being diagnosed in people between the ages of
15 and 35. Our work supported by the trust will help us
understand better why these rates are increasing, and to
create public awareness around potential diagnoses and
treatments,” says Christchurch Hospital gastroenterologist
and University of Otago Professor Richard Gearry.
“We need to put a lot more time and research into
why we are seeing higher incidences in Christchurch. Working
with Foodstuffs gives us the opportunity to create networks
around the South Island which can help us teach people to
think and act on any changes in their bowel habits, much as
they would if they had a sore leg or a persistent
cough.”
Anderson agrees. “Our new partnership with
the Gut Foundation will help provide South Island
communities with the knowledge and tools to take greater
responsibility for their families’ gut health. It’s our
hope this will be a significant step in the reduction of gut
disease in the South Island and beyond.”
South
Island gut disorders: the facts
• One in 84
Cantabrians has coeliac disease – above the national
average of 1 in 100 across New Zealand
• Canterbury and
Nelson have one of the highest rates of inflammatory bowel
disease in the world – a number that’s still
increasing
• South Island communities have the highest
rates of bowel cancer in the world.
Gut health in New Zealand: the facts
• 70,000 New Zealanders are
living with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) – Crohn’s
disease and ulcerative colitis. This number has doubled in
the past decade
• Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS)
currently affects one in six women, and one in nine men.
While IBS can usually be managed with diet, some symptoms
can be an indicator of something more serious, requiring
medical
intervention.