minister of health Tony RyallFriday 26 October 2012, 4:05PM
Media release from Minister of Health Tony Ryall
20,000 New Zealand children at 125 schools are now saying 'ahh' as
part of the Government's rheumatic fever prevention
programme.
"The programme is being rolled out to 34 South Auckland schools,
with Sir Edmund Hillary Collegiate in Otara starting school-based
sore throat clinics this week," says Health Minister Tony
Ryall.
"By February next year, over 41,000 children at 191 schools are
expected to be part of the programme which treats a child's sore
throat before it progresses into rheumatic fever.
"The previous government said in 2001 that reducing the impact of
rheumatic fever was a priority. It failed - rates for this largely
preventable third world disease have actually increased in the past
ten years," says Mr Ryall.
"The National-led Government has made reducing rheumatic fever
rates a priority. Reducing the incidence of this serious disease is
one of the Prime Minister's better public service targets to
support vulnerable children.
"We have committed $24 million to reduce the incidence of rheumatic
fever by two-thirds to 1.4 cases per 100,000 people by June
2017."
The rheumatic fever prevention programme is in place in the most
vulnerable local communities of eight areas - Northland, South
Auckland, Waikato, Bay of Plenty, Lakes, Tairawhiti, Hawke's Bay
and Porirua.