logo
Govt gives green light and $83m for Waikato medical school

Govt gives green light and $83m for Waikato medical school

1News21-07-2025
The Government has approved a business case and $83m in funding for a new Waikato University medical school, as part of a plan to strengthen the health workforce.
The New Zealand Graduate School of Medicine will receive more than $150 million from the university — supported by philanthropy — according to the Government, bringing total funding to more than $200 million.
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon said the third medical school for New Zealand would not just be a "significant investment" for the health system but for Hamilton and the Waikato region.
"New Zealand simply isn't training enough doctors to meet the future needs of our growing aging population or to replace those doctors retiring, and that has to change."
The new school was a "practical step" to change that by boosting the medical workforce, creating new educational opportunities in the Waikato and helping deliver better care closer to home, he said.
ADVERTISEMENT
"It's certainly a big win for the future of our health workforce; it's a big win for the Waikato; and, most importantly, for patients."
Health Minister Simeon Brown said the school would focus on primary care and rural health.
"Today's decision will enable the University of Waikato to begin construction on new teaching facilities later this year and start planning for clinical placements, while giving more students the opportunity to study medicine in New Zealand," he said.
Experts have warned that the initial proposal for the facility was likely to be unaffordable. (Source: 1News)
The medical school would add 120 doctor training places annually from 2028, offering a graduate-entry programme "providing a flexible new pathway into medicine that helps attract a broader range of students and build a stronger, more diverse workforce".
"It's an innovative model that supports our focus on strengthening primary care, making it easier for people to see their doctor, helping Kiwis stay well and out of hospital."
The Government approved precisely $82.85 million in direct funding for the project.
ADVERTISEMENT
Brown's office said a full cost-benefit analysis was presented to Cabinet before any proposal was finalised. ACT had negotiated for the analysis to be completed before any binding funding decision could be approved, in its coalition agreement with National.
Universities Minister Shane Reti said the funding decision represented a "real boost for tertiary education in the Waikato".
"By expanding access to medical training, we're creating new opportunities for students from across the region and beyond, while also helping to future-proof the local workforce," he said.
"This is exactly the kind of forward-thinking initiative this Government wants to see from our universities – investing in regional growth, building local capability, and delivering on the needs of rural communities."
The Health Minister added the new places were "on top of the 100 additional medical training places that are being added over the term of this Government across the University of Auckland and University of Otago".
Report found more cost effective training could be delivered by the two existing schools and both universities could increase intakes quicker with increased funding. (Source: 1News)
ADVERTISEMENT
Auckland and Otago universities had previously offered to train more medical students if that could be supported by the Government.
Pro-Vice-Chancellor Health Sciences at Otago, Associate Professor Megan Gibbons, acknowledged today's announcement of a third medical school as part of the Government's strategy to address New Zealand's healthcare workforce needs.
"We are disappointed that Government did not follow the alternative and more cost-effective option of further increasing the intakes into the country's existing medical schools," she said.
"However, any investment that supports growing and sustaining the health workforce is a step toward strengthening care for our communities — particularly in rural and underserved regions."
Four-year programme to begin in 2028, first graduates by 2032
University of Waikato vice-chancellor Professor Neil Quigley called the announcement a "landmark moment" for New Zealand.
"We will be offering a programme that selects and trains doctors in a fundamentally different way and will complement New Zealand's two existing medical schools.
ADVERTISEMENT
"It will be designed to produce more graduates who choose to become GPs and who want to work in regional and rural communities."
Quigley said the four-year programme would begin in 2028, with first cohort graduating and entering the workforce in 2032.
Pro vice-chancellor of health Professor Jo Lane said the New Zealand Graduate School of Medicine curriculum would train "the doctors New Zealand needs".
"Our curriculum will prioritise clinical placements in regional and rural health settings, allowing graduates to experience working with diverse populations while building deep connections in the communities they serve."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Bowel Cancer NZ Meets With Health Minister To Push For Screening From Age 45 & Post-Treatment Exercise Programme
Bowel Cancer NZ Meets With Health Minister To Push For Screening From Age 45 & Post-Treatment Exercise Programme

Scoop

time18 hours ago

  • Scoop

Bowel Cancer NZ Meets With Health Minister To Push For Screening From Age 45 & Post-Treatment Exercise Programme

Press Release – Bowel Cancer New Zealand Bowel Cancer New Zealand met with Hon Simeon Brown last week to push for two life saving measures: lowering the national bowel screening age and introducing a supported exercise programme after chemotherapy The meeting was constructive, with the Minister outlining work taken in response to the charity's screening proposals put to him in February. Work is now underway on both measures – but screening timelines remain unclear. A further meeting later this year was agreed. Work on screening age progressing – but no plan yet Bowel Cancer NZ reiterated its costed proposals, first presented to the Minister in February, showing how the Government can deliver on Prime Minister Christopher Luxon's 2023 pledge to match Australia's screening age of 45. The plans are achievable, affordable, and reinstate earlier screening for Māori and Pacific peoples – groups with worse survival rates under the current one-size-fits-all approach. The Minister confirmed that improvements in investigations for people with symptoms are rolling out from this month – a key enabler for lowering the screening age. He acknowledged that moving to 58 is only a step on the journey, describing it as 'a step, but it's not enough' – signalling the Government recognises the need to go further. Bowel Cancer NZ Chief Executive Peter Huskinson said: 'It's encouraging that our proposals are being taken seriously – but we need solid timelines. Every month that goes by, more than 50 Kiwis in the age group that can access screening in Australia are diagnosed with bowel cancer.' The minister stated that modelling to inform next steps is not expected until late 2025 or early 2026, leaving little time to implement changes before the next election. Under BCNZ's proposals, screening from 45 could be implemented swiftly, with earlier eligibility for Māori and Pacific peoples reinstated. Without this, stark inequities remain, with many people developing bowel cancer before reaching the current starting age of 60. Ball rolling on major survival gains through exercise after chemotherapy Bowel Cancer NZ also presented evidence from the landmark CHALLENGE trial, which shows that a structured behaviour change and exercise programme after chemotherapy increases eight-year survival rates by 7% for Stage 2 and Stage 3 patients – saving more than 50 lives each year in New Zealand. 'This is one of the biggest survival gains we've seen in years,' said Huskinson. 'It's highly effective, highly affordable, and could be rolled out nationwide within 12 months. We want to see the Government champion this and make it standard care.' The Minister responded positively, asking officials to provide further advice and inviting BCNZ to meet with the Ministry of Health and Health New Zealand to discuss modelling and next steps. Next steps The meeting ended with a commitment to meet again. 'Many New Zealanders are frustrated and rightly want faster action. We share those concerns and will keep pressing the case for change,' said Huskinson. 'Kiwis facing the impact of bowel cancer don't have time to wait. Every month matters, and we'll keep advocating until these life-saving measures are delivered.' Bowel Cancer NZ will continue working to ensure all New Zealanders benefit from timely equitable screening, high quality treatment, and innovative post-treatment care – to work towards a future where no life is lost to this disease. More information on bowel cancer and the Bowel Cancer New Zealand charity can be found at

Tauranga cancer survivor urges bowel screening as almost half of kits not returned
Tauranga cancer survivor urges bowel screening as almost half of kits not returned

NZ Herald

timea day ago

  • NZ Herald

Tauranga cancer survivor urges bowel screening as almost half of kits not returned

When broken down by ethnicity, fewer than half of the kits sent to Māori, Pasifika and Asian people have been returned – 41.9%, 41.8% and 33.1%. Ferguson said she got upset hearing these statistics because there were 'so many people under the age of 60 that are screaming out to have those kits'. 'They know they have something wrong and they're just not being heard so therefore they're not getting screened because doctors are either saying 'you're too young' or 'it's something else'. 'That's wasted resources.' She said the scary thing with bowel cancer was someone could have it and have no symptoms. This was the case with Tauranga man Paul Blears, who said it was 'a hell of a shock' being diagnosed with bowel cancer after he used his screening kit. 'By doing that test, you are catching things early … which will avoid late-stage diagnosis,' Ferguson said. The National Bowel Screening Programme was introduced in the Health NZ Bay of Plenty region in May 2022. It was the last of the former 20 district health boards to introduce it after the programme started in July 2017. People are invited to join the programme at age 60 then sent a free home test kit every two years until age 74. The Government is gradually lowering the eligibility age to 58, to be in effect nationwide by March. The Health NZ data showed 103 cancers were detected between January 1, 2023, and May 26, 2025, and 78 surgeries were carried out to remove bowel cancer. Health NZ noted this may include people who had surgery who did not have their cancer detected via a screening kit, and that some patients may have had surgery in another district, or privately. Patients who chose chemotherapy treatment would not be recorded in surgery numbers, and others newly diagnosed may be waiting for surgery. Tauranga bowel cancer survivor Rachael Ferguson pictured in 2022. Photo / Andrew Warner Almost five years since her diagnosis, Ferguson said her scans and blood test results were 'great'. 'I feel great, which is the main thing,' said Ferguson, now aged 37. She gave birth to her son George in September 2022. 'He was such a good baby … he's really come into his own kind of personality now.' Ferguson said she had recently completed a reformer Pilates instructor course and would soon start teaching. She had also been doing paid partnerships on social media. With a background in early childhood education, she had done some relief teaching. 'After the diagnosis and also becoming a mum myself, I just felt like I was ready to leave that side of things. 'It's just been trying to find something else.' Bowel cancer is the second-highest cause of cancer death in New Zealand, killing about three Kiwis every day. One in 10 Kiwis diagnosed are under 50. New research by Bowel Cancer New Zealand showed one in four adults were unable to name a single symptom of bowel cancer, which Ferguson said was 'pretty concerning'. Bowel Cancer New Zealand chief executive Peter Huskinson said symptom awareness was the 'strongest line of defence', with screening currently limited to those aged 58 and older. 'Acting early, before symptoms become severe, can mean the difference between a treatable diagnosis at the GP and a late-stage emergency presentation. 'That free test in your mailbox doesn't just detect cancer – it can stop it before it starts,' he said. 'Don't leave it in a drawer. Put it by the loo and get it done.' Bowel cancer symptoms Bleeding from the bottom or in your poo A persistent change in bowel habits Ongoing, periodic or severe abdominal pain Unexplained weight loss or fatigue A lump or swelling in the abdomen Source: Bowel Cancer NZ Megan Wilson is a health and general news reporter for the Bay of Plenty Times and Rotorua Daily Post. She has been a journalist since 2021.

Northland news in brief: Whangārei bus hub reopens after upgrades
Northland news in brief: Whangārei bus hub reopens after upgrades

NZ Herald

timea day ago

  • NZ Herald

Northland news in brief: Whangārei bus hub reopens after upgrades

The new Rose St bus hub in central Whangārei features plenty of covered seating and shelter, four public toilets, a ticketing office and better pedestrian spaces. Photo / WDC The Rose St bus hub in central Whangārei has reopened to CityLink bus passengers after several months of construction. The project includes a new bus office, which is now open for all passenger queries, including topping up BeeCards, timetables and route questions. There are also new waiting areas, toilets and a pedestrian walkway from Rose St to Vine St. The Whangārei District Council-project was done in conjunction with Northland Regional Council and funded by NZTA Waka Kotahi. Heart specialist access improves Health Minister Simeon Brown is celebrating faster heart specialist access in Northland. The number of patients waiting for their first specialist assessment with a cardiologist dropped 36% since November 2023 and the number waiting longer than four months dropped 68%, he said. Measures to reduce the waitlist include running regular cardiac clinics at rural hospitals, prioritising those who have waited the longest and expanding local services, including the catheterisation lab at Whangārei Hospital. Brunch on Us Farmers, growers, and rural whānau are invited to join the Rural Support Te Tai Tokerau for Brunch on Us — a series of relaxed drop-in events across Northland. Running from Monday until September 3, from 11am to 1pm, the events are a chance for rural people to come together, enjoy some kai, and connect with others who understand the unique challenges of life on the land. For more information visit

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store