Ginny Andersen sen Labour List ist MP based in Hutt South
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Petone 04 568 2949 Wainuiomata 04 564 4988 ginnyandersenmp
Authorised by Ginny Andersen, Parliament Buildings, Wellington.
Wednesday August 5, 2020
Thursday 10-14
Today 10-14
Friday 7-13
Saturday 7-12
Phone: (04) 587 1660
Thanks from the PM
By: Gerald Rillstone
Crowds packed out Wainuiomata’s community hall last week to welcome Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern on her visit to say thanks to the community members who worked tirelessly during the Covid lock-down. Continued on page 2.
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Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern greets Hutt City councillor Josh Brigg’s 7 month old daughter Harriet during her visit to Wainuiomata to say thanks to all the community members and volunteers who contributed to helping the needy in the community during the Covid-19 lock-down.
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A big day for locals Continued from page 1 What was meant to be a small community lunch saw people turn out in the 100s to greet her. Local identity Ken Laban introduced her telling the crowd that when the world looks at New Zealand and our prime minister they see leadership that is built on giant pillars of humanity, kindness, inclusion and diversity. “She is without peer around the world as a global leader as a role model and as an outstanding example of what we understand and comprehend to be leadership in modern day times,” Ken says. Speak ing to the crowd Jacinda began with a quote from historic labour Prime Minister Norman Kirk.
“Norman Kirk once said that all anyone really needs is somewhere to live, something to do, someone to love and something to hope for,” she said. She went on to thank the community for their efforts during the Covid lock-down. The Wainuiomata community came together to provide those in need with food and other aid, while central government bolstered those efforts with the wage subsidy, benefit boosts and doubling the winter energy payment. “Now my hope is that we learned something from that,” she says. “And that coming out of that phase, and whatever we move to in the future, we bring with us this lesson that if we get those basics right - if we make
Ginny Andersen with Jacinda Ardern, Mate Taitua and Sep Taitua. Photo: Gerald Rillstone sure we’ve all got housing, we’ve on our own - then we are well on all got something meaningful that our way to building a society that means that we can have dignity truly can stand with its head held and get food on the table, that we high that we are looking after our all have connection to community most vulnerable, in good times and and one another, even if we are bad times.”
Rebuild for Naenae Pool Lower Hutt Mayor Campbell Barry joined Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern to champion the Governments announced $27 million investment towards the rebuild of Naenae Pool. Mayor Campbell Barry says this is momentous for the local community, which has been hard-hit following the closure of the current pool facility in April last year. “This is massive news for Lower Hutt and the Naenae community
in particular. Local people, businesses, and community groups have told me time and again the closure of the pool has had a huge impact on them and their livelihoods,” he says. Campbell Barry says the funding from Government follows Hutt City Council’s submissions to the Infrastructure Reference Group, who were tasked with evaluating “shovel ready” infrastructure projects. “The rebuild of Naenae Pool will unlock massive local economic
benefits, which will be a vital part of our economic recovery following COVID-19. Through the rebuild, we have an opportunity to create and support more than 200 local jobs, and we will ensure as much of the project spend stays within Lower Hutt. “At the end of this, the community and region will have a first-rate aquatic facility, which we can all be proud of,” he says. Hutt City Council Chief Executive
Jo Miller says the rebuild of Naenae Pool is a priority for Council, and the funding from Government will turbo-charge the project. Work on progressing the design phase of Naenae Pool has started with Council at the procurement stage for the design team and architects and engineering consultants. Building works are expected to get underway mid2021, and be completed by December 2024.
Kōrero mai: te para me te hangarua Talk with us: rubbish and recycling We’ve received over 2800 submissions, have you had your say? We want to know what you think. Scan the code below or go online at hutt.city/haveyoursay for more details, including a cost calculator to find out how your household’s annual collection costs could change. Then give your feedback using our easy to follow online form. OR visit any Hutt City Library and read a copy of our Consultation Document. Our staff will be there to help and provide feedback forms.
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Wednesday August 5, 2020
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inbrief news Lumi Drug Scan Police and ESR are excited to announce the development of a real-time drug screening tool for frontline officers to use while working in our communities. The handheld device will allow our officers to test for the three most harmful and commonly used drugs on the New Zealand market; methamphetamine, MDMA and Cocaine. A six-month trial of the devices will be carried out across Tāmaki Makaurau as well as in Canterbury and Central Police Districts.
Teacher wellbeing concerning
Right: At the Period Poverty event Northland labour list MP Willow-Jean Prime, Kere Bennett, and Labour list MP Hutt South Ginny Andersen. Photo Gerald Rillstone
Period poverty
By: Gerald Rillstone Public Health Nurse Kere Bennett held the first ever Period Poverty expo last week at Wainuiomata Intermediate. Kere says she was prompted to organise the event because although the government has made a policy to provide girls with sanitary products. All the products they are providing are tampons and pads and there are lots of other options out there for young women. She says the aim was to also empower the young women,
she says. “We also thought there is so much more to health we could do so we have added in mental health. We included the people from ‘Days for Girls’ who have reusable pads,” Kere says. “Ignite Sport was also another group that were involved with getting women activite in sport to improve mental health.” The expo was held after school for two hours, she says, to make it available for mum’s and aunts to come along with the young women. Recent research released by
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Waiwhetu Medical Centre is now enrolling new patients. Located at 148 Whites Line East Lower Hutt. Dr Musab Hassan has joined our team and is currently taking new patients.
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KidsCan estimates 20,000 primary, intermediate and secondary school students are at risk of “period poverty”, meaning they are unable to or struggle to afford sanitary products. The University of Otago report found that for students experiencing period poverty, there were “lifelong implications for their health, emotional development, education and career prospects”. Another KidsCan report by the University of Auckland found that along with supplying products, there should be
Do you need a
Alarming findings from a new health and wellbeing survey of primary and area school teachers and principals show action is more urgent than ever, says NZEI Te Riu Roa President, Liam Rutherford. Results from NZEI Te Riu Roa’s 2019 survey of teachers and principals in primary, area schools and kura, show that teachers and school leaders report significant job strain and associated negative health impacts which far exceed the general population.
educational resources committed to teaching students about menstruation. The report found there “is a profound lack of knowledge around menstruation in some schools” from both students and staff, and that they need more support. The report also recommended that because young New Zealanders are getting their periods at a younger age than previously thought, education needs to begin in primary school to inform and to reduce stigma.
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Wednesday August 5, 2020
readers have their say... Find out the WORD on the Street.
Q: What are your plans for next year after you finish year 13?
Charlote Brownlie
Leila Barber
I’m planning to go to the University of Canterbury and study criminal justice
I’m going to take a gap year hopefully getting overseas and then probably going to Otago University to do a balchelor of arts.
Madeline LoughnanLynch I’m hoping to study agricultural science at Massey University in Palmerston North.
Madison Taylor
Sneha Wevita
Tuia Tapuke
I’m planning to go to university in Canada and pursue rowing as well as doing a balchelor of arts majoring in English.
I’m going to Otago University and I’m planning to do a balchelor of arts majoring with psychologyand a batchelor of commerce majoring in management.
I’m planning on going to Victoria University and doing a double major in international relations and foreign policy.
Staff exhausted clients at risk Workers who support New Zealand’s most vulnerable people say their clients are in danger because their employer introduced failing systems. HealthCare NZ is a privately owned for-profit company that provides publicly funded home care and support to elderly, disabled and injured New Zealanders, enabling them to continue living in their own houses with dignity. Public Service Association mem-
bers say things have gone from bad to worse since the company rode roughshod over staff and community opposition, axed over 100 regional admin and coordinator jobs and replaced them with call centres in Auckland and Dunedin. Both clients and employees of HealthCare NZ regularly report waiting for an hour or more when they attempt to call the new service centres. “Support workers go from house
Stay Safe with your Cold Medicines this Winter The annual cold season is well under way, and if you or your family members are starting to get sick, you may be looking into cough and cold medicines. Many of these medicines can be bought from supermarkets and pharmacies. While not intended to be a cure, they are designed to ease your cold and flu symptoms. It is important to take these medicines safely and correctly. What do you need to be mindful of when selecting your cold and cough medicines? 1. Don’t double up Many cold medicines contain pain relievers, such as paracetamol (Panadol). It’s very important not to take any extra paracetamol at the same time. Many cough and cold products contain similar ingredients. Before selecting more than one product, check that the ingredients don’t double up. If you are still unsure, ask your pharmacist what products are compatible for you. 2. Check for interactions Interactions are when two or more medicines or natural health products affect each other.
Common medications that can interact with cough and cold medicines include high blood pressure medicines, antidepressants, and warfarin (blood-thinning medication). Natural health supplements can also affect your medicines. For example, many virus defence supplements contain garlic, which can interact with warfarin. If you’re taking these or any other medicines/supplements, ask your pharmacist if they are safe to use together. Generally, ask for your pharmacist’s help if you’re: • buying for a child; • taking antidepressants; • taking any other medicines to treat a cough or cold; • pregnant; • affected by high blood pressure or problems with your heart, kidney or liver. Come into Clive’s Chemist so we can make a recommendation that’s best suited for your particular cough and cold symptoms.
Clive’s Chemist, 20-21 Queen Street, Wainuiomata. (04) 564 8618 • clive@clives.co.nz • www.clives.co.nz
to house in their own cars, operating mostly independently. Their work is coordinated over the phone, and that support used to be provided by local people in local offices,” PSA organiser Chris Ollington says. “Our members loudly predicted in nationwide protests this new system would not work, and it gives us no pleasure to see those predictions were correct. If systems don’t work in a job like this, vulnerable people suffer and can end up in serious danger.”
When support workers are unable to call in sick without spending hours on hold, this can mean cover is not provided and clients do not receive scheduled visits. PSA members report many examples of client care being put at risk as a direct result of the new service centres being introduced. The PSA empathises with the call centre workers, who despite their best efforts often do not have the experience and training to fill the void
HealthCare NZ created by slashing its admin and coordinator jobs. Many service centre employees have told the union they feel understaffed, undertrained and overwhelmed. The PSA wrote to the Ministry of Health requesting they intervene to investigate the situation, and the union calls on Healthcare NZ to halt the implementation of new systems until their serious failures are addressed and resolved.
Poi for fitness
Getting some real enjoyment out of a morning of Poi at the Wainuiomata HUB Laki Luia. Photo: Supplied Getting fit using poi at the Wainuiomata Hub is an enjoyable way to keep mobile and learn a new skill. Operations manager at the Library Lagi Moananu says Poi is both the name of the object (a weight on the end of a flexible cord) and what you do with that object (spin it in circles around your body). It is believed that poi originally came from the Maori of New Zealand. Today poi continues to play an important role
in Maoridom and across the globe as a form of performance, play, and fitness. Though there is little information about poi in New Zealand prior to European arrival, it is generally believed that poi was used by Maori men to train strength and flexibility, and by Maori women as a form of entertainment. According to Maori researcher Dr. Karyn Paringatai, poi was originally part of the “dance” section of the whare täpere, meaning the “house of enter-
tainment.” During the wars waged against Maori in the 1860’s, Te Whiti and Tohu, two Maori leaders committed to resisting the European land invasion through non-violence, utilized poi as a religious and spiritual messenger. After the wars, poi took on the role of attracting tourists and became a staple item in kapa haka (Maori performing arts). Poi continues to play a prominent role in Maoridom today.
Wednesday August 5, 2020
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Construction on Beltway Cycleway Lower Hutt Mayor Campbell Barry and Associate Minister of Transport Hon Julie Anne Genter turned the first sod to mark the start of the much-anticipated Beltway Cycleway Campbell Barry says the cycling ‘spine’, which will eventually extend between Seaview and Taita, is a watershed moment for the community. “This project started off with the community recognising the need for safer areas for all means of transport. The Beltway Cycleway is an example of what can happen when the people of Lower Hutt and Council partner together, and I want to thank the Government and Waka Kotahi NZ Transport Agency for allowing this project to eventuate into reality,” he says. With an estimated 8 month build-time, the new 2.5m wide off-road sealed and separated cycleway will provide cyclists
safe access from Waterloo to The River Trail at Taita. The pathway will also boost access to existing and future cycling connections including the recently announced Knights Road pathway trial - part of the Innovating Streets programme. “We want to encourage our people to get out their bikes or walk more, but we know this will only happen if we supply them safe, reliable options. The Beltway Cycleway certainly provides our people the opportunity to get our more, and do so safely,” Mayor Barry says. Waka Kotahi Director of Regional Relationships, Emma Speight says the Beltway is the latest in a line of projects to be delivered in partnership with Hutt City Council - with more to come. The cycleway is designed to complement the recently completed Te Hikoi Ararewa
Lower Hutt Mayor Campbell Barry, Associate Minister of Transport Hon Julie Anne Genter and Hutt City Council Chief Executive Jo Miller. Photo: Supplied (Wainuiomata Hill Shared Path) and the upcoming Te Ara Tupua and Eastern Bays Shared Path.
The Central and Northern sections of the Beltway are a $7 million project jointly funded
by Waka Kotahi NZ Transport Agency (51%) and Hutt City Council (49%).
National Waiata Maori Music Awards It is time to celebrate our Maori artists over the coming month to help lift the wairua of indigenous music artists all over the world. Saturday, August 1 marked the start of the fifth annual Te Marama Puoro Waiata Maori - Maori MusicMonth, designed to nurture, grow and inspire
up and coming performers and established artists alike. There are a range of events planned for the month which starts with officially opening nominations for the 13th annual National Waiata Maori Music Awards. The awards executive director
Ellison Huata says everyone around the world is feeling the impact of the international pandemic and Maori music will be a good way to lift the spirits of people no matter where they are in the world. “I think our Maori artists in particular have been doing it tough this
year and it’s great that we’re going to be able to have these two events to celebrate our singers, songwriters and performers. “It’ll give people something positive to focus on over the next couple of months, a chance to reset and refocus, a reprieve from the chal-
lenges of the past three or four months”she says. Ellison says this year’s Te Marama Puoro Waiata Maori - Maori Music Month will keep to its original kaupapa, putting a focus on celebrating emerging and established performers, growing their musical talents.
What’s Cooking... in Beef and red wine casserole Ingredients:
Method:
• 1 kilogram beef chuck steak (see recipe tip), trimmed, cubed • 1/4 cup seasoned flour • 1/4 cup olive oil • 2 carrots, trimmed, chopped • 2 celery stalks, chopped • 1 onion, chopped • 2 garlic cloves, crushed • 4 cup campbell’s real beef stock • 400 gram can diced tomatoes • 3/4 cup red wine • 4 thyme sprigs, plus extra to serve • 2 fresh bay leaves
1. Preheat oven to moderate, 180°C. Toss meat in
Mashed potato to serve
seasoned flour, shaking off excess.
2. In a large casserole dish, heat 2 tablespoons oil on high. Brown meat in 3 batches for 3-4 minutes each. Transfer to a plate. 3. In the same pan, heat remaining oil on medium. Sauté carrot, celery, onion and garlic for 3-4 minutes.
4. Return meat to pan with stock, tomatoes and wine. Add thyme and bay leaves, then season. Bring to the boil, stirring.
5. Bake, covered, for 1 hour. Uncover and bake for a further 30 minutes until meat is very tender. Top casserole with extra thyme and serve with mash.
Invites you to attend a drop-in session to talk with us about proposed changes to rubbish and recycling. Board members will be available to answer questions, listen to your feedback and help you with your submission.
Wainuiomata Community Hub 9th August 3-4 pm
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Wednesday August 5, 2020
GARDENING THIS WEEK
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Gardening craze: By Wally Richards
MINUTES WITH
Daiji Kataoka Teacher of Japanese and International Dean at Wainuiomata High School There is a very big increase in the number of people gardening currently. Two factors for this is; the emergence of spring which always brings people back into their gardens for a new season. Also we now have lots of people that have realised that the world is not a secure place they had grown accustomed too. Ta l k ing to ga rden cent res through out NZ there is a big upsurge in people gardening and wanting to grow their own vegetables and fruit which is just common sense anyway no matter if times are good or bad. Food security is common sense and to have sufficient growing and stored for use not only gives you a safeguard, (if you do it the right way) it will actually improve you and your family’s health as well. Vegetables and fruits we buy at the supermarket are nowhere as good as the ones you can grow at home. Generally speaking commercial grown are fairly tasteless because of the man-made fertilisers used to force growth to quickly mature crops (faster the turn around the more crops per year and the more
income earned) Forced growth in nature does not make for nutritional goodness and healthy plants. We know in nature that plants that are not healthy are attacked by all manner of diseases and pests (which are Natures Cleaners). Pests and diseases are the bane of commercial growers and to prevent losses and damage to their crops they apply chemical preventives and controls. As analysis of vegetables & fruits have shown by NZ Food Safety that up to 23 poisons are found in each fruit and vegetable tested (that’s only the ones they test for, there are others they don’t even bother testing for). So to sum up you have produce that is fairly tasteless, having minimum nutritional goodness and full of poisons that your body has to deal with? No wonder people have woken up to the fact that growing as much of your food naturally at home is far better in every way possible. It is also easy to do you just have to use natural products such as animal manures, blood &
bone, sheep pellets, BioBoost and composts. They are the basics then you need to apply a range of minerals and elements which are available from the sea (Ocean Solids & Bio Marinus Liquid Fish Fertiliser Plus) From rocks (Wallys Unlocking your Soil) and from prehistoric times when the world was mineral rich (Magic Botanic Liquid) Then we need to garden the soil by applying foods to feed the soil life and this is done by using calcium, (Garden Lime, Dolomite, Gypsum) Mycorrcin, BioPhos, Silicon, Bio Marinus Liquid Fish Fertiliser Plus, Neem Powder and compost teas. If pests or diseases attack then there are natural products such as Wallys Super Neem Oil and Perkfection to assist control. The result is: the vegetables have great flavour that are a pleasure to eat and do not require garnishes to make them taste good; i.e salt, sugar, fat. I am pleased to see that so many people are taking up gardening, long may it continue and grow (Pun intended).
What food do you crave most often? Japanese street food When you have had a bad day, what do you do to feel better? Go to the gym, talk to my friends, go for a bushwalk What’s one thing on your bucket list? Travel around the world Who has been the biggest inspiration in your life? All the students who work very hard and try to improve themselves What’s the most beautiful place you’ve ever been?
What thing do you really wish you could buy right now? My own family home somewhere in Wellington!
What is the best or worst purchase you’ve ever made? A smartphone that lasted for a few weeks... Favourite programme currently watching? I don’t really watch TV programmes If you had to flee the country, where would you choose to live? Spain or Italy
Spain, Barcelona
What was the last photo you took? My baby boy at Battle Hill Farm
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Wednesday August 5, 2020
OUT&about
Photos: Gerald Rillstone
Wainuiomata welcomes PM By: Gerald Rillstone Celebrating the community and volunteer support during the lock-down Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern was welcomed to Wainuiomata’s community hall for a lunchtime event. Originally there was to be a small group but with her popularity hundreds
were keen to hear her speak and get a chance to have a photo opportunity with one of the countries most popular PM’s. The event was well catered for with dishes supplied by Hutt based The Remakery with a special package put together for the Prime Minister to take with her as she headed to Wellington Airport.
Jacinda Ardern is greeted by Maori Warden Mandy Atkinson.
Mate Taitua presents Jacinda with gifts.
Ngapera Mei takes the opportunity to get a selfie with Jacinda Ardern.
Always popular Jacinda Ardern is mobbed during her visit.
Jaylyn Rawiro and Psalms Harema-Sione prepare a welcome sign fit for a Prime ministers visit.
With little time to eat during the lunchtime visit Jacinda Ardern Wainuiomata College Kapa Haka group perform a stirring Haka during the prime is gifted lunch on the go supplied by the Remakery who also catered for the event. ministers visit.
Wednesday August 5, 2020
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Up and coming champion By: Gerald Rillstone
His trainer Craig Bennett says the next step up from winning the provincial titles is a national title. “It was to be in 2020 but because of the covid thing it’s happening in January of next year and the 2021 nationals will be in October of that year.” “It all gets bigger as he goes along,” Craig says. Mahaki is boxing in the cadet class which is 12 to 14 year olds and to compete in the nationals Craig says a boxer needs to have won a provincial title and Mahaki has two. Mahaki started boxing when he was 11-years-old and both his parents box and he has set his sights firmly on winning the nationals. “I always try to keep moving in the ring and focus on throwing a lot of punches,” he says.
Wainuiomata’s Mahaki Webster has found his niche in boxing and is proving to be an up and coming champ. The 13-year-old has competed in three provincial tournaments and won two, including the Wellington champs. It hasn’t been all wins though, a week after winning the Wellington tournament he competed in the Manawatu championships and lost in the final against a boy who went on and won the nationals for that cadet range. Just last month he attended the Central North-Island champs and won the final. He is working towards a golden gloves win in the cadets.
Mahaki Webster in training at the Wainuiomata gym. Photo Gerald Rillstone His favorite boxer is Muhammad Ali which is a good thing as Craig teaches a left hook which was a punch that floored Ali. “The left hook I teach here is the
left hook from Muhammad Ali loosing to a boxer a guy called Henry Cooper,” Craig says. He teaches how it was generated and how it was thrown.
“The way I see it is if it was good enough to knock over Muhammad Ali it is a good one to teach.” “It’s all about timing and the angle the punch is thrown,” he says.
Hutt Valley Choral Extravaganza Two premier Hutt Valley community choirs, the Wainuiomata Choir and the Hutt Valley Singers, will come together with orchestral and organ support to present a wonderful programme of classical music. The combined choirs will sing two very well known works by the composer Joseph Haydn. Each choir will also perform sepa-
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rately, with works from their own repertoire, the Wainuiomata Choir will sing the Magnificat by Durante, with orchestral accompaniment. The Hutt Valley Singers will sing the Cantique de Jean Racine by Gabriel Faure, sung in French with organ accompaniment, and Machet die Tore Weit by Georg Phillipp Telemann sung in German with
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orchestral accompaniment. Joining the choirs will be four great soloists Imogen Thirlwall, soprano; Emily Simcox, alto; James Adams, tenor; and Roger Wilson, bass. The orchestra will have Yid-Ee Goh as concert master, and the organist will be Judy Dumbleton. It has been an exciting and challenging time for both choirs to
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CLASSIFIEDS Wednesday November 18, 2015 Trades and Services
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The Community Noticeboard is for Composed by Tony Watling 11th. Nov. 2015 non-profit organisations. For $15.00 you can publish up to 25 words. No AGMS, sporting notices or special meetings. Community Notices must be pre-paid. Our summer pools were built by us. Call into our office, phone (04) 587 Blends in well did cause no fuss. 1660 or email classifieds@wsn.co.nz With hydro slide will cause a splash. And to it many people dash. Through native bush we twist and wiggle. From the children brings a giggle. Death Notices Pets is open. Severn days a week the place Hot summer days we all hopen! DEBIQUE, Kusma: Aug 2, 2020 CATTERY Casa Deare Wootton, home away from
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A new virtual triage service developed during lockdown has identified skin cancer in 12 percent of high-risk patients examined according to new figures. New Zealand has the world’s second highest rate of melanoma with more than 2,500 new registrations and around 400 Kiwis dying from this form of cancer every year[1]. The new contactless service, designed locally by MoleMap, was used by melanographers in New Zealand and Australia to assess A solidpatient lesions remotely and refer high priority cases for further diagnosis and treatment during the lockdown. The data showed that for every 100 patients screened, 282 suspect lesions were imaged with dermatologists finding a total of 12 skin cancers, including eight melanomas, one of which was a nodular melanoma, the most serious form of skin cancer.
MoleMap, which has the world’s largest database of skin lesions, identifies around 400 new cases of melanoma each year in New Zealand and Australia. Associate Professor of Medicine and Dermatologist Amanda Oakley says that melanoma can progress quickly and it is critical to diagnose and treat early before the cancer cells enter the bloodstream. Jodi Mitchell, MoleMap chairperson, says the new tech is an easy and inexpensive way to get a spot that concerns a patient evaluated by an experienced skin cancer nurse who can ensure diagnosis and treatment of the most worrying lesions is prioritised. She says the lockdown has accelerated their development of new virtual skin cancer diagnostic services and enabled MoleMap to offer patient solutions now provided in both a virtual and physical environment.
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By Russell Russell McQuarters McQuarters By By Russell McQuarters By Russell McQuarters
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Wednesday August 5, 2020
SPORT
11
SPORTS TALK With Jacob Page
Sport can moonlight in many ways It’s always interesting when a high profile former sports star like Dan Carter comes out calling for calmer attitudes by those on the sidelines of community sport. His son is now a keen footballer which means the Carter family have swapped a kicking tee for a pair of football boots. Now Carter takes aim largely at parents overworking their kids in pursuit of either their own dreams or those of their child but in general I think behaviour on the sidelines of community sport in general. I’ve spent 13 years roaming the sidelines of sport in Timaru,
Christchurch, Blenheim, Nelson and Wellington and through time it has mellowed me. I was on the fast-track to being an over-zealous sideline parent but having witnessed so many lapses in judgement from people at sports fields over the years, it’s become clear to me that behaviour is unacceptable. I’ve seen incidents in all sports from netball, rugby, soccer, hockey, cricket and even once at tennis. By far the worst behaved supporters and players for that matter, in terms of consistent issues, is football.
Many supporters, players and coaches lose the plot during the 90 minutes of the fixture. There’s something about the beautiful game that makes their blood boil. You could not pay me to be a football referee. The abuse they take on a regular basis, from what I’ve seen, surpasses any other sport in this country. That does not mean that other sports do not have their rogue issues, because they do but football has a long way to go to tidy up its sideline image. While I still believe kids can
still play to win because, trust me, they know the score regardless of their age, the experience has to be a fun one for the young people participating. If kids are pushed to excel too early by their parents, they burn out or rebel. Like when your parents told you not to do something, being pushed to achieve at sport can result in the opposite happening. Sport must be fun regardless of how old you are. The moment you do not enjoy it, is the moment you stop doing it. I often do stories on young kids getting sports scholarships to
American colleges. Very few of them ever go on to represent New Zealand at the highest level. Many burn out while others realise the sport they thought was their life was actually just a vehicle for them to get a free education. It is that education which ends up setting them up for life. That outcome is fantastic but so is a life-long love for a sport from a social point of view. Not everyone has to be an All Black, All White or Black Cap. Happy, healthy and socially satisfied is a win in anyone’s book.
Ulalei too strong for Maidstone By Vaegaau Isaac
Ulalei Pua were too strong and too classy for Maidstone to take a well deserved 76-35 win. Ulalei Pua only had a slender 13-11 lead at the end of the first quarter. A second half blitz of 47 goals to 16 secured an emphatic victory. MVP Alicia Hina delivered yet another stellar performance on attack at centre, goal shoot and goal attack pulling out all the tricks, the rolls, dodges and base line drives to deceive the Maidstone defence before finishing with her accurate shooting. Hina used screens, strong holds and clever feeding to formulate an impressive combination with young goal shooter Sarah McLeod Venu. Ulalei Pua welcomed back Hayley Mellon playing her first game of the season, she showed her prowess on defence with a number of deflections and strong drives on attack. Mellon slotted in seamlessly with the formidable defensive unit of Nykala Toheriri and Alofa Aberdein-Tapuai closing off attacking space for the Maidstone shooters, contesting the ball in the air to restrict the opposition to just 16 goals in the second half. Coach Alicia Colledge said it was a slow start, which got better
Ulalei Fuesina C Cerie Milovale takes a penalty pass against Te Aroha. Photo: Lahraine Sagaga
Ulalei Fuesina GK Summer Pere stretches to defend shot against Te Aroha. Photo Lahraine Sagaga.
in the second quarter, with the 3rd and 4th quarters being the best. She was impressed with the defence across the court. Ulalei Pua will need to take this cracking form into next week’s game as they take on Naenae Collegians, currently sharing second place with Ulalei Pua on the Premier 1 table. Ulalei Fuesina vs Te Aroha Ulalei Fuesina were victorious
Tamaalii earned her the MVP for the game. Itula was able to overcome the physicality of the Te Aroha defence with ease, absorbing the constant pressure with smart footwork, attacking the ball in the air before shooting with accuracy, signed off with a smile. The umpires were impressed by the talented, skilful and clean play from Ulalei Fuesina and
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against Te Aroha winning 41-19. Ulalei Fuesina got off to a flying start leading 15-4 after the first quarter, providing coach Karina Sagaga the luxury of rolling her subs and trying out new combinations. Bree Itula played an excellent game at goal attack, her accurate long range shooting combined with impeccably timed off-loads to her shooting partner Sina
commented how beautifully they played. A testament to the coaching team and players. Ulalei Fuesina dominant winning all four quarters. Come along to support Ulalei Netball on Saturday 8 August at Walter Nash Stadium Ulalei Pua vs Naenae Collegians 1.30pm Ulalei Fuesina vs Maidstone 3pm.
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