Campaign exposes tactics betting companies use
A new campaign is exposing the tactics companies use to target young men and encourage them to bet. Problem Gambling Foundation director of advocacy and public health Andree Froude spoke to Charlotte Cook.
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RNZ News
4 hours ago
- RNZ News
Young people speak on the impact of having concussions
sport health about 1 hour ago An expert in traumatic brain injuries is calling for consistent protocols when dealing with concussions in schoolyard sport to prevent debilitating long-term impacts. While there's greater awareness about the risks associated with concussion, Pat Hopkins from the Laura Fergusson Brain Injury Trust said that too often, head knocks are treated differently if they occur during lower-level sports. Checkpoint spoke to young people who've been concussed playing sport at school and university, and continue to suffer consequences for years afterwards. Bella Craig reports.

RNZ News
4 hours ago
- RNZ News
More needed to tackle schoolyard sport concussions, expert says
Photo: NICK VEASEY/ SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY / AFP Warning: This story discusses suicide. An expert in traumatic brain injuries is calling for consistent protocols when dealing with concussions in schoolyard sport to prevent debilitating long-term impacts. While there's greater awareness about the risks associated with concussion, Pat Hopkins from the Laura Fergusson Brain Injury Trust said that too often, head knocks are treated differently if they occur during lower-level sports. Checkpoint has spoken to young people who've been concussed playing competitive sport throughout school and university and continue to sufferer the consequences for years afterwards. They want others to know about the the mental and physical toll that concussion can have and the gruelling rehabilitation process that's required. Moses Bygate-Smith was in a freak accident while trialling for a national ice hockey team in 2018. He was told he had a severe concussion, his third in 18 months. In the months that followed his injury, he said the symptoms took over his life. "If there was even just a pamphlet, for example, with a couple of words, or even just a short sentence on it, I couldn't read that sentence without getting an excruciating headache. When I'd have conversations with people, I would be halfway through a sentence, and I would actually forget what I was saying." He said he experienced depression and anxiety during the months of his recovery. "There were thoughts of sort of suicide at that time just because I guess it was very hard to think that potentially this was going to be the state of my life, for the for the rest of my life." He was unable to read, listen to music or exercise as he grappled with giving up the sport he dedicated so much of his life to. "Being sort of a person that lived and breathed ice hockey as much as the concussion was hard. I think what was a driving factor of the difficulty was the identity crisis that sort of comes with the changes you have to make from a head injury, especially for people [who] are athletes or involved with sports." Bygate-Smith has come a long way since his injury and has gone on to complete a master's degree in sports science. But the impact of his injury lingers to this day. Georgia Hendry grew up racing horses competitively and suffered multiple concussions while riding. She'd find it hard to study and struggled with exhaustion. After a car crash in 2021, things became even worse. "I went to the doctors, and I was like something's not right. I can't even sit in a lecture and obtain information; I'm having to go home and rewatch the lectures and then pause the lectures so I could keep up with the person speaking." She said not being able to play sport impacted her mental health. She's come a long way since her injury and is now working full time as a preschool teacher. But she said the recovery process was long and gruelling. "It's not an easy recovery and it's a very long recovery. It's not like a broken bone, it's your brain." Hopkins said the Christchurch-based Laura Fergusson Brain Injury Trust is seeing three times more clients than a few years ago. "The recognition of concussion has improved a lot over recent years and the awareness, so I think people and things like the blue card system in rugby have helped. "It's not just 'oh you'll be right' anymore, it's still out there a little bit, but it's changed." But she said it's in lower grade sports, where more could be done to protect younger people from sustaining concussions. Currently, the cost of seeing a doctor deters many people from getting checked. Hopkins said she wants consistent protocols for schoolyard and lower-level sports. "The kids just want to play and so it sometimes takes a strong coach to say, 'well, no, you can't play, you may be feeling okay, but it hasn't been enough time since your injury." "If the protocols and rules were more established that might help that." Over the past four years, new concussion injury claims lodged to ACC have increased from just over 39,000 in 2022 to 47,000 in 2024. There's been over 24,000 concussion injuries claimed so far this year. A claim to ACC may include multiple injuries. ACC estimates 30 percent of concussions go unreported. The highest number of concussion claims are from falls, followed by sports-related injuries. If it is an emergency and you feel like you or someone else is at risk, call 111. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

RNZ News
5 hours ago
- RNZ News
Health Minister Simeon Brown slams striking health workers for 'playing politics'
Simeon Brown has called for the cancellation of proposed strikes next month. Photo: Calvin Samuel / RNZ Health Minister Simeon Brown has criticised the nurses' union on Thursday afternoon, saying health workers are playing politics with patients' lives. The NZNO union cancelled a two-hour strike for perioperative, theatres and radiology services in Christchurch about 45 minutes before it was due to begin on Wednesday In a statement, Health New Zealand said there was no time to re-instate postponed appointments, affecting 85 patients. Health NZ confirmed nurses had, in July, been offered a pay increase of two percent this year and one percent next year on top of step-progression increases, with two additional "lump sum" payments of $325 over the next two years. Brown called a media conference with less than three hours' notice to call for the cancellation of more strikes planned for next month, saying they would "cause real, avoidable harm to more than 13,000 patients across the country". "As a direct result of the union's actions, more than 2200 surgeries will be canceled," he said. "Around 3600 first-specialist appointments will be delayed and about 8000 critical follow-up specialist appointments will be pushed back." He said the union had "put politics ahead of patients". The cancellation of the Christchurch strike was also "staggering" and he focused particularly on a social-media comment posted by one union member. "While union members walked back into work and collected a full day's pay, those patients lost the care they desperately needed. "A recent post on the New Zealand Nurses Organisation Facebook group suggested the late notice was a deliberate tactic to 'create chaos and keep health New Zealand guessing', even praising it as 'bloody beautiful tactics, comrades'." He claimed such tactics were "unacceptable" and "needs to be called out". "I ask them to tell that to the faces of the 13,000 patients, who are having their care cancelled, because they will see this as, frankly, them losing out on the care that they've already been waiting far too long for. "This is, quite frankly, playing politics with people's lives and it makes me furious. We value our nurses and the vital care that they provide." He pushed back, when reporters pointed out it was just one post by a member in a private group, rather than a statement from the union itself. "Well, I'm sorry, that is what the union did," he said. "The union cancelled the strike 45 minutes before the strike came into effect and that meant that 85 patients in Canterbury yesterday could not have their care rebooked. "If you look at their Facebook group, it was all about making sure that they kept health New Zealand guessing." Brown's statements followed Education Minister Erica Stanford and Public Service Minister Judith Collins saying secondary school teachers striking was "premeditated" and a "political stunt" . The union plans to strike next Wednesday over a one percent pay-rise offer, but the ministers said striking was deeply unfair on parents and students. Collins told Morning Report that teacher strikes were becoming a "yearly attack" on them . The government has recently cracked down on non-strike industrial action, but Brown said the union should be working with Health NZ and negotiating in good faith, rather than striking. "Ultimately, these are public servants who work in hospitals, and their role is to care for patients and put patients first," he said. "That is not what they're doing. "It's an incredibly important point that these union contracts not only have the increase that is on offer, but also have annual step increases, which those staff get, based on how many years that they are in the job, and that's a point that media don't highlight." Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.