
- M膩ori health organisations have criticised the Government鈥檚 revised National Bowel Screening Programme for increasing M膩ori and Pasifika men鈥檚 mortality risk.
- The screening age will be lowered to 58 for all, reversing plans to lower it to 50 for M膩ori and Pacific men.
- Experts argue the change fails to address health disparities, urging targeted screening to reduce preventable deaths among M膩ori.
M膩ori health organisations say M膩ori and Pasifika men have been given an early death sentence following the Government鈥檚 revised National Bowel Screening Programme.
Health Minister Simeon Brown has announced the Government is lowering the screening from 60 to 58 for all New Zealanders 鈥 and canned plans to lower the age for M膩ori and Pacific men to 50.
Act supports lowering the age to 58 for all men 鈥 starting in March 2026 and the cancellation of lowering the age for M膩ori and Pasifika men to 50.
鈥淎ct campaigned against targeting services based on race. The move to reduce the eligibility age for free bowel cancer screening to 58 is 鈥榥eed, not race鈥 in action, and will save lives,鈥 says Act leader David Seymour.
But chairwoman of the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons National Committee, Dr Ros Pochin, says introducing a blanket policy covering all races made sense if the statistics backed that up. However research shows bowel cancer affects M膩ori and Pacific Island men at a younger age.
鈥淔ar too many M膩ori and Pasifika are dying that could have a fighting chance if they were screened from 50,鈥 says Bowel Cancer NZ medical adviser Professor Sue Crengle. Photo / Ministry of Pacific Peoples
鈥淲hile increasing access to life-saving bowel cancer screening is a positive step, this plan doesn鈥檛 shift the dial far enough and fails to address the stark health disparities M膩ori face,鈥 Pochin said.
M膩ori are more likely to be diagnosed with bowel cancer at a younger age, and at more advanced stages, compared to non-M膩ori.
Leading health experts and advocacy groups have long called for the screening age to be lowered to 50 for M膩ori and Pacific peoples, in line with the evidence.
鈥淲ithout a targeted approach, this decision risks leaving M膩ori further behind, despite clear evidence that earlier screening would have the greatest impact on reducing preventable deaths in our communities.鈥
Bowel cancer is the second most common cause of cancer-related deaths in New Zealand, and M膩ori are disproportionately affected by late diagnoses.
H膩pai Te Hauora chief executive Jacqui Harema.
M膩ori health policy organisation H膩pai Te Hauora acknowledges the expansion of the National Bowel Screening Programme to 58 years but is also concerned by the removal of funding for targeted M膩ori and Pacific screening initiatives.
鈥淭he data is clear 鈥 M膩ori develop bowel cancer earlier, and without targeted interventions, we will continue to see late diagnoses and higher mortality rates,鈥 says Jacqui Harema, H膩pai CEO.
鈥淚nstead of cutting these programmes, the Government should be prioritising them.鈥
Hei 膧huru M艒wai chairman Nina Scott has labelled Brown鈥檚 decision institutionalised racism.
鈥淭he Government knows that M膩ori are at higher risk yet has chosen to cut a programme that was working to improve outcomes. As experts have pointed out, this move is not just inequitable 鈥 it is totally unethical and will cost lives,鈥 Scott said.
She noted targeted bowel screening pilots have proven successful with a programme in Waikato that lowered the screening age to 50 for M膩ori and Pacific resulted in multiple early cancer diagnoses and the removal of precancerous polyps 鈥 life-saving interventions that would not have happened otherwise.
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