ISSN 1178-6191

Maori Health Review

Making Education Easy Issue 118 – 2025

Maori Health Review
Maori Health Review
Maori Health Review

CVD risk assessment by ethnicity in Aotearoa New Zealand

Authors: Selak V et al.

Summary: Māori and Pacific peoples experience inequities in cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk assessment, according to a national observational study. People aged 25-74 years living in New Zealand on 31 March 2018 who were eligible for CVD risk assessment (n = 1,476,747) were analysed. Between 1 April 2018 and 31 March 2023, 67.1% of men and 65.5% of women had CVD risk assessment tests. After adjustment for socioeconomic deprivation and residential district, the odds of CVD risk assessment was lower in Māori men (aOR 0.77 [95% CI 0.72-0.83] with diabetes; 0.73 [95% CI 0.72-0.74] without diabetes) and Māori women (aOR 0.93 [95% CI 0.87-0.99] with diabetes; 0.89 [95% CI 0.87-0.91] without diabetes) compared with Europeans. The odds of CVD risk assessment was also lower in Pacific men (aOR 0.86 [95% CI 0.78-0.94] with diabetes; 0.72 [95% CI 0.70-0.74] without diabetes), and Pacific women without diabetes (aOR 0.95 [95% CI 0.92-0.98]) compared with Europeans.

Comment: With CVD being a leading cause of avoidable premature death for Māori, this study has importantly quantified an often-invisible step in the CVD prevention continuum. Targeted strategies that redress equity in the wider determinants, in system design and in clinical practice, rather than simply increase screening overall, are needed.

Reference: BMC Glob Public Health. 2025;3(1):94.

Abstract

A mixed methods realist analysis of telehealth delivery of complex wheelchair assessment in Aotearoa New Zealand

Authors: Graham F et al.

Summary: A study has shown that therapist and system barriers limit the uptake of telehealth delivery of complex wheelchair assessment, and recommends telehealth-specific training in culturally-responsive rehabilitation. The study included remote specialist assessors (physiotherapists and occupational therapists), on-site assistants, and wheelchair users, and involved interviews/ focus groups, assessment of mobility goals, satisfaction, and fidelity of tele delivered assessment of wheelchair and seating (tAWS). In 78% of cases, tAWS was declined by on-site assistants where specialist assessors had perceived it could work. Among wheelchair users who did receive tAWS (n = 5), goals were achieved in the majority of cases, and service satisfaction was high.

Comment: Interesting findings. I hadn’t actually thought about telehealth specific cultural-safety training before reading this, but it makes sense.

Reference: Disabil Rehabil Assist Technol. 2025;20(7):2208-2220.

Abstract

Individual, household structure, and socioeconomic predictors of COVID-19 testing and vaccination outcomes

Authors: Satherley N & Sporle A

Summary: A whole-population linked data analysis assessing COVID-19 health outcomes (infection, hospitalisation, mortality and vaccination status) in New Zealand between 2020 and 2023 revealed persistent ethnic inequity that was partly explained by modifiable social factors. Most COVID-19 outcomes were worse for Māori and Pacific peoples compared with non-Māori, non Pacific peoples. Factors associated with worse outcomes were high housing mobility, poor quality housing, household crowding, disability, no primary health care enrolment, lower household income and older age. Ethnic inequities were reduced but not eliminated after adjustment for household structure and socioeconomic factors.

Comment: This study helps our understanding about the structural drivers of COVID-19 inequities including testing, vaccination, and mortality/deaths – and how these disproportionately affected Māori and Pacific communities. Importantly, inequities are not inevitable – they reflect modifiable, policy amenable determinants such as housing, primary care access, and income security, as well as the value in resourcing Māori-led solutions. Thanks, Andrew for sending this paper through!

Reference: Int J Popul Data Sci. 2025;10(1):2930.

Abstract