Successful launch of Pacific health research partnership
11 April 2019
Last Friday, a group of over 120
people gathered on a cold, blustery Autumn night in a hall
above a burnt out pub on Bedford Street in Cannons Creek,
Porirua, to hear about a ground-breaking project to change
health outcomes in one of the neediest Pacific communities
in New Zealand.
In a 'first', the renowned research
centre, Maurice Wilkins Centre, hosted by the University of
Auckland, will team up with the only Pacific owned &
governed health service in the Wellington region, Pacific
Health Plus - literally based on the street below in Cannons
Creek - to battle very significant health problems faced by
Pacific people.
The project will look to the
community to further ground-breaking research which has
revealed that Pacific and Māori people have a gene which
predisposes them to heart disease, diabetes and obesity and
also to study youth to track impacts of sugar.
Everyone in the room was buzzing to be part of
something which will draw attention to Pacific needs with
real tangible outcomes and ways to improve quality of life
and life expectancy.
Speaking to the excited and
expectant group was an impressive line-up of VIPs:
John Fiso, chair of the Fiso Investment Group and Pacific Health Plus
Professor Peter Shepherd, Deputy Director of the Maurice Wilkins Centre
Hon Kris Faafoi, Member of Parliament for Mana
Mayor of Porirua, Mike Tana
Paul Eagle, Member of Parliament for Rongotai
Dr Rosemary Hall, Endocrine, Diabetes and Diabetes Research Centre, Capital & Coast District Health Board
Pastor Teremoana Tauira Maka, Pacific Health Plus Advisory Board, Pastor of the Victory Church
Reverend Perema Leasi
Also in attendance was the team from the Maurice Wilkins Centre; representatives from health and social service providers in Porirua; significant church leaders; members of the Cannons Creek community and Pacific Health Plus board members.
Pastor Teremoana,
as the first speaker of the evening, explained how Pacific
Health Plus, the medical centre in Cannons Creek (previously
called Porirua Health Services) had been servicing the
community for 10 years but acknowledged that the time had
come to take the service to the next level, and that recent
investment by the Fiso Investment Group will allow
this.
Mike Tana, Mayor of Porirua said the evening was a ‘celebration of Porirua and Pacific Health Plus’ and thanked everyone for their ‘love of Porirua’ and how this next step with a new and meaningful research project was a positive one for the area with lives to be changed for the better. Mr Tana said that self-determination is the best way forward for communities and this project - ‘for Pacific by Pacific is an awesome example of this’.
Hon Kris Fafooi, MP for Mana, acknowledged
John Fiso by saying how since the Fiso Group came in to help
Pacific Health Plus he had seen ‘nothing but action’,
and the speed with which the partnership with Maurice
Wilkins was established shows commitment to a community.
Minister Fafooi also thanked the Maurice Wilkins Centre for
recognition that ‘for Pacific by Pacific’ was the most
effective way forward.
John Fiso, chair of the Fiso
Group and Pacific Health Plus, thanked the VIPs in
attendance and those in the room who had shown goodwill and
had helped.
Mr Fiso acknowledged the importance of
data as part of properly understanding problems and
determining solutions and that self-determination was
critical to the data being used successfully - “with
research owned and delivered by the people who will benefit
from the outcomes to ensure integrity of the
data”.
“This is a milestone for Pacific Health
Plus - a project which will bring real change,” said Mr
Fiso. “However, we need more debate about solutions for
Pacific people and we cannot look at health in isolation -
we need to factor in housing, employment and education as
part of the real solution.
“We will seek further
partnerships as a way forward - but we recognise that
building trust and confidence through successful delivery of
our projects is key to this,” said Mr
Fiso.
Professor Peter Shepherd, Deputy Director of the
Maurice Wilkins Centre commented on what a privilege it is
to work with Pacific Health Plus. He explained how Professor
Maurice Wilkins, who the Centre is named after, was a New
Zealander who won the Nobel Prize for Medicine, and that for
Professor Shepherd, the centre’s name signifies the
potential for New Zealand to use scientific research to
achieve better outcomes for its citizens.
“It is
time to break boundaries and work as one to change the
health landscape for Pacific people in New Zealand,” said
Professor Shepherd. “And we are not going to change the
world from our ivory towers behind university walls - but by
working in the community as partners.
“We have to
move fast, we can’t waste time,” Professor Shepherd
said. “We cannot assume that because medicine is tested on
people in the US that it will work for our Māori and
Pacific communities - we must look at how genetics influence
this. We also need to harness links schools, communities and
education to help achieve better outcomes.
“I am
excited about the opportunity Pacific Health Plus provides
for the community to be part of finding the answers and
creating the solutions. The fact we are here tonight opening
a cutting edge research centre above a burnt out pub that
sits beside a red stickered building in this very needy area
of Wellington is symbolic of what Pacific people face - and
the Maurice Wilkins Centre wants to be part of changing that
and helping the community reach the heights it
deserves.”
Dr Rosemary Hall said that Pacific
people, who have highest rate of diabetes in NZ, had been
failed and their needs were not being met. “We need to
better understand the reasons for different rates of
diabetes within different groups and see the situation in
context of the bigger picture. Having evidence, from
research, and having Pacific lead this is critical,” Dr
Hall said.
Further information on the Pacific Health
Plus and Maurice Wilkins Centre research partnership is
below in the Editor's notes.
The Maurice Wilkins
Centre is a national Centre of Research Excellence that
brings together over 400 of New Zealand’s top scientists
and clinicians from all over the country.
Pacific
Health Plus is a primary healthcare service in Cannons
Creek, Porirua, and is the only Pacific owned and governed
healthcare service for Pacific people in the Wellington
region. It services over 2000 people in the Cannons Creek
community.
ends