21 Feb 2022

Marae health centre stepped in to provide care during Delta

From Nine To Noon, 9:32 am on 21 February 2022

 A community health clinic in Auckland says during last year's Delta outbreak, it became the default provider of medical and welfare care for self-isolating patients, because the Ministry of Health was failing to provide adequate care.

Papakura Marae Health Centre serves a community of more than 3,200 people, with at least 95 percent identifying as Māori or Pasifika.

When the government moved to a mixed MIQ and Community Supported Isolation and Quarantine (CIQ) model, the Ministry of Health contracted Whakarongorau Aotearoa to carry out a remote check-in service for patients.

However the Papakura Marae Health Centre soon observed issues with the service, including reports of whānau isolating in unsafe homes and a failure to consistently perform timely check-ins and reviews.

The Papakura Marae Health Centre decided to step in and take over the role of the Ministry of Health's system. Kathryn Dr Matire Harwood is a GP at the Papakura Marae Health Centre.

She is also Associate Professor at the University of Auckland and senior researcher at the Medical Research Institute of New Zealand.

South Auckland GP Dr Matire Harwood co-authored a new report in the New Zealand Medical Journal on how the Papakura Marae Health Clinic coped with last year's Delta outbreak.

Photo: Supplied