Diabetes Wellness Spring 2021

Page 26

Care

Pharmac launches pioneering campaign A new campaign from Te Pātaka Whaioranga – Pharmac will raise awareness and encourage Māori and Pacific people with high-risk type 2 diabetes to access equity-funded medicines through their GP.

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our well-known and respected Māori and Pacific personalities who either live with type 2 diabetes or have whānau members who have it will head the three-month campaign. Kaumātua Phil Merritt, rugby league star Adam Blair, entrepreneur Makaia Carr, and playwright and filmmaker Aroha Awarau will all encourage whānau to visit their GP to see if this medicine is right for them. Trevor Simpson, Chief Advisor Māori for Pharmac, says they have used a broad range of whānau to connect with multiple demographics to ensure the campaign reaches as many people affected by type 2 diabetes as possible. ‘We have been listening, and people with diabetes, their whānau, and health professionals have told us that there is a need for these medicines (Empagliflozin and Dulaglutide) to be funded to help manage the growing health problem of type 2 diabetes in Aotearoa,’ says Simpson. A PHARMAC FIRST

This campaign is a first for Pharmac, not only in its specific reaching out to Māori and Pacific peoples, and its use of different marketing channels, but also in the way it indirectly addresses equity of access through policy. The theme of the campaign is ‘You Are a Priority’.

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DIABETES WELLNESS | Spring 2021

Pharmac’s new central values: Whakarongo Listen Tūhono Connect Wānanga Learn together Māia Courage Kaitiakitanga Preserve, protect and shelter our future

Phil Merritt Makaia Carr

With mortality rates for Māori with type 2 diabetes seven times higher than non-Māori, and the prediction that one in four Pacific people will have the disease in 20 years – this equity funding is there to make sure there is fairness in the health system. ‘There are no hoops to jump through. We’re making it easier for people to get their medication,’ says Simpson. The list price for these medicines ranges from $60 to $115 a pack, but because they are now funded people

will only pay $5 for their prescription. Through this campaign, Pharmac hopes to increase awareness of these diabetes medicines and to develop a clearer understanding of how to further connect with Māori and Pacific communities about future medicines as they continue to address equity issues. The campaign starts in early August and runs until October. It will appear on Māori TV, national newspapers, posters, digital ads, Zui panels and Facebook.


Articles inside

Last Word

1min
page 38

Inspired to care

12min
pages 28-31

Living to tell the tale

10min
pages 18-21

Enjoy a Garden Workout

4min
pages 14-15

Health in the heartland

1min
page 5

PASSION PROJECT

7min
pages 8-11

Pharmac launches new campaign

2min
pages 26-27

Making our voices heard

4min
pages 36-37

RESEARCH ROUNDUP

4min
pages 32-33

Diabetic neuropathy – what you need to know

5min
pages 34-35

YOU CAN'T BEAT BEET!

3min
pages 16-17

MEALS FOR ONE

5min
pages 22-24

Murray Dear: Two decades of dedication to diabetes

2min
page 25

EDITORIAL

2min
page 4

100 years of insulin

1min
page 12

UPFRONT: Fieldays 2021

1min
page 5

Tribute to Sir Eion Edgar

4min
pages 6-7

Call for applications

1min
page 13
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