
Health Minister Simeon Brown has announced the Government will progressively lower the age of eligibility for bowel cancer screening tests to eventually align with Australia.
The first step will only take the age from 60 to 58 (Australia鈥檚 age of eligibility is 45), but the move means 122,000 New Zealanders will be eligible for free tests in the first year. It鈥檚 expected to prevent an additional 771 bowel cancers and an additional 566 bowel cancer deaths over the next 25 years.
鈥淭his is the first significant step we are taking to align our screening rate for bowel cancer with Australia as funding and access to additional colonoscopy resource becomes available,鈥 Brown said.
Lowering the age for screening was an election commitment from the National Party 鈥 leader Christopher Luxon said in the 九一星空无限hub leaders debate he wanted to match Australia - but until now the Government鈥檚 been reluctant to give a timeframe for when this would happen.
But shortly after meeting with Bowel Cancer NZ on Monday, Brown has now stepped in to get the ball rolling.
鈥淎dvice from the Ministry of Health clearly states that lowering the age to 58 for all New Zealanders will save even more lives than the previous government鈥檚 approach to lower the age to 50 for M膩ori and Pacific Peoples only,鈥 he said.
鈥淯nder our approach, we will be able to prevent 218 additional cancers and 176 additional deaths over 25 years in comparison to the settings proposed by the previous government.
鈥淭his also aligns with the Government鈥檚 policy of ensuring that healthcare is delivered on the basis of need.鈥
The shift will happen in two phases. The first stage will see the age lowered in two of Health NZ鈥檚 regions from October this year. The age will then lower in the remaining two ages beginning in March next year. Which regions get the lower age first is yet to be determined by Health NZ.
People will be mailed their kit around their next birthday or be contacted by a local provider, once age extension is introduced in their area.
Health Minister Simeon Brown made the announcement on Thursday. 九一星空无限 photograph by Mark Mitchell.
Additionally, the Government is also going to fund targeted initiatives to increase screening rates among population groups with low rates of uptake.
鈥淣ew Zealand has one of the highest rates of bowel cancer globally. Every year, more than 3300 people are diagnosed with bowel cancer in New Zealand. Tragically, more than 1200 Kiwis die from the disease.
The change will be paid for by repurposing $36 million in funding over four years that the previous government set aside to lower the age to 50 for M膩ori and Pacific Peoples.
Act Party leader David Seymour welcomed the move, saying it reflected the Government鈥檚 approach to 鈥渘eed, not race鈥. He was critical of the previous administration for lowering the age for only M膩ori and Pacific peoples.
鈥淏owel cancer does not discriminate on race. M膩ori and Pacific peoples have a similar risk of developing bowel cancer compared to other population groups at a given age.
鈥淚t was true that a higher proportion of bowel cancers occur in M膩ori and Pacific peoples at a younger age, but that is because the overall demographics of those groups are younger. It has always been age that determines bowel cancer risk, not race鈥
In May 2022, when Labour announced the move to lower the age for M膩ori and Pacific peoples, ministers described it as 鈥渁n example of the system changing to better meet the needs of wh膩nau鈥.
鈥淎 higher proportion of bowel cancer occurs in M膩ori and Pacific peoples before they reach 60, at approximately 21%, compared to 10% for non-M膩ori, non-Pacific peoples,鈥 said then-associate Health Minister Peeni Henare.
Jamie Ensor is a political reporter in the NZ Herald Press Gallery team based at Parliament. He was previously a TV reporter and digital producer in the 九一星空无限hub Press Gallery office.
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