There are numerous ways in which the Covid 19 response failed Māori. In this post I use Ministry of Health figures for Covid 19 deaths to explain why inequities for Māori are obscured in the publicly available data. https://t.co/r9lPvFWyvY
University of Auckland Staff to Vice-Chancellor Dawn Freshwater: "[R]everse your decision and to offer your full support to students and staff who may choose to exercise their right to protest by establishing a peaceful encampment on campus grounds" 🇵🇸
https://t.co/HzTowQhLr5
I see they've now opened up more non member tix. I had a hard time finding any overlap between the NZ Tech member companies and Māori Tech companies featured in the Toi Hangarau report https://t.co/fn9BchPyoi
Received an email two hours ago about "Bridging the participation gap of Māori in Aotearoa’s tech sector"... but there are zero remaining tickets for people who aren't already members of NZ Tech. How about we start there?? https://t.co/zFAanWR0Mu
@NZTechIA@SparkNZ I see more non member tickets have been opened for the event... thanks. I was having a hard time finding Māori tech businesses mentioned in the Toi Hangarau Māori report on the NZ Tech member list. https://t.co/fn9BchPyoi
@NZTechIA@SparkNZ Is this a members only event? There are no non-member tickets available. And then--out of curiosity--what are the implications of this for Māori participation at an event about Māori participation?
Incidentally, here is a model trained on historical surgical data that does quantify a health equity gap: https://t.co/jyXYE8yaxy. Check the BJS article for details. 4/4
It would be very useful if more technical details of the Equity Adjustor Score were made public. If it uses models based on historical surgical wait time data found that longer wait times were positively correlated with factors like remote location and deprivation rating 1/4
that shows that ethnicity as a factor _does_ correlate with longer time-to-surgery even though it ought not to. In the meantime, a lot of poor commentary is filling an information vacuum. 3/4
The use of this tool for election-year race-baiting has been disgusting. And unfortunately the public detail of how the score was developed is minimal. But there is potential to keep discussing these important matters and keep moving toward eliminating these inequities. 11/11
The path to the surgical waitlist is not the same for everyone—there are inequities for Māori and Pasifika. An analogy would be a network of roads (the pathway to the surgical waitlist) that lead to a bridge (the surgical waitlist) where the surgery is represented by 1/n
"These latter areas have got to be our focus, but the surgical wait list issues can be the leverage for the real action on these. Simply being successful in getting prioritised waiting lists happening is nowhere near enough on its own.” 10/n