Tagata Pasifika

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New Zealand television
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Tagata Pasifika

The Pacific voice on
New Zealand television
since 1987

Counties Manukau DHB says service providers stuck in ‘catch up’ with child immunisation

The MMR vaccine which is used to immunise children against measles, mumps and rubella. Photo: TOM LEE/STUFF
The MMR vaccine which is used to immunise children against measles, mumps and rubella. Photo: TOM LEE/STUFF
The MMR vaccine which is used to immunise children against measles, mumps and rubella. Photo: TOM LEE/STUFF
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Local Democracy Reporting | Free Public Interest News Service

Counties Manukau District Health Board says South Auckland healthcare providers appear to be caught in a “seemingly impossible catch-up phase” as they try to tackle declining child vaccination rates.

The concerns were outlined in a recent paper to the DHB which says immunisation rates fell considerably between March 2020 and March 2021 and have continued to drop since.

The Ministry of Health aims for 95 percent of children to be fully vaccinated at eight months, 24 months and five years of age.

But the rates across the board in South Auckland are much lower and it’s something the Counties Manukau DHB is keen to arrest.

Figures show 85 per cent of children in Counties Manukau were fully vaccinated at eights months of age in February, but only 67 percent of Māori babies were fully immunised. That compares to 83 per cent for Pasifika infants, 89 per cent of Europeans and 98 per cent of Asian children in the same age group.

Childhood immunisation includes the MMR vaccine for measles, mumps and rubella, as well as vaccinations for pertussis (whooping cough), polio, diphtheria, tetanus, rotavirus, influenza and Covid-19, for those who are eligible.

A Counties Manukau DHB spokesman said it has already set aside funds to invest in its immunisation programme, but it is not seeking additional support from the Ministry of Health.

Turuki Healthcare chief executive Te Puea Winiata says it is very hard for primary healthcare providers in south Auckland to maintain their staff and capacity to carry out vaccinations when they don’t have certainty of funding. Photo: ABIGAIL DOUGHERTY/STUFF
Turuki Healthcare Chief Executive Te Puea Winiata. Photo: ABIGAIL DOUGHERTY/STUFF

But Turuki Healthcare chief executive Te Puea Winiata said it’s very difficult for primary healthcare providers in South Auckland to maintain their staff and capacity to carry out vaccinations when they don’t have certainty of funding.

“We need certainty of funding so we can target key communities,” she said.

Winiata said the fee for service contracts it has with the DHB for Covid-19 vaccinations, which sees it paid per event, means it is very difficult to plan ahead.

“I think we definitely need more investment and we need a whole shift of thinking,” she said. “Instead of just the Covid-19 vaccination programme, we need a whole whānau vaccination programme.”

“I think for Māori community it’s important that we look at the whole picture.”

Dr Nikki Turner is the medical director of the University of Auckland’s Immunisation Advisory Centre and said the fall in child immunisation rates is a nationwide problem and began before Covid-19 struck in 2020.

She said the lower vaccination levels for Māori children aged five and under is a sign of the growing equity gaps in the health system, which have only become worse under the pandemic.

Turner said families in lower socio-economic communities like South Auckland are often struggling to find housing, or put food on the table and keeping up with child vaccinations isn’t seen as a priority.

“And a lot of the children aren’t enrolled with a GP, so they aren’t embedded in the system and that’s a big problem,” she said.

Turner said two of the most pressing issues with the drop in child vaccination rates are whooping cough and measles and the poor immunisation rates in areas like South Auckland need to be taken seriously.

“If we don’t we will suffer the consequences.”

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