Pacific health expert says Auckland measles case is a 'red flag'
Nurse Laura Williams gives a Māngere College student a measles vaccination.
Photo:
RNZ / Rowan Quinn
A Pacific health expert is encouraging everyone to get vaccinated to keep their families and other Pacific nations safe.
Aotearoa is on alert for measles after a case was
identified
in Auckland over the weekend.
The country's public health agency issued the alert on Sunday after a ferry worker was identified as infectious with measles while at work and in public.
Measles is a
highly infectious and potentially deadly disease
. It infects children as well as adults and spreads through coughing, sneezing or talking.
Up to 90 percent of non-immune people - those who have not been vaccinated against measles, or have not had it already - will be infected if exposed to the virus.
Dr Api Talemaitoga said Pacific communities are particularly susceptible to the disease due to low vaccination rates.
In December, 70.4 percent of Pacific babies were fully vaccinated (two measles, mumps and rubella - MMR - shots) at age two, according to health data.
For Māori, the rate was 63.3 percent. Overall, 76.4 percent of two-year-olds were fully vaccinated.
Two doses of the MMR vaccine prevent measles in 95 percent of people over the age of one, and 98 percent of those aged over 18 months.
Dr Talemaitoga said the Auckland case was "a red flag" for Pacific communities.
"Because for Pacific, we know the history of what happened several years ago, where we effectively
exported measles to Samoa
resulting in the death of 80-plus young children.
"We don't want that to happen."
Cases were
reported in American Samoa
in 2023.
Dr Talemaitoga said to prevent outbreaks of measles, 95 percent of the population needs to be fully immunised.
A high immunisation rate is also important for preventing the disease from spreading within Pacific families and communities, and to smaller Pacific nations, he said.
"Our islands will really struggle to respond.
"Their health systems are stretched. They do their best with the resources that they've got, and it's fantastic what they can do, but this is like an added burden on already stretched health systems in our Pacific Island nations, and so I think we really need to be careful."
Dr Talemaitoga said Pacific families living in New Zealand must be vigilant.
"Traditionally [in New Zealand], we live in overcrowded houses. We tend to have a lot of family gatherings. And if someone is unknowingly or unwittingly unwell, they can pass on this measles virus to others," he said.
"Pacific people also have higher rates of comorbidities - respiratory problems, asthma, diabetes, high blood pressure - things that may lower their immunity and make them more susceptible to the virus."
Vaccinologist professor Helen Petousis-Harris said the latest measles case confirmed in Auckland highlights the "ticking time bomb" of low vaccine rates.
Petousis-Harris told
Pacific Waves
that measles vaccination numbers have been declining in Aotearoa including among Pasifika communities, and the drop is due to a number of factors.
"We need it to be easy for people to access the services," she said.
"We need to be able to support the frontline services to make sure that they are able to deliver.
"But also, we have had an increase in hesitancy, a loss of trust, and the challenge of misinformation. So, we have got all of these things against us at the moment."
She said the covid pandemic did not help with vaccine rates, but since then they have continued to decline every year.
"We did really well to about 2016 and then they began to decline.
"We are now at a stage where we have extremely low coverage, particularly in some communities.
"For example, among Māori infants at the moment, there could be less than half of them who have received their measles vaccine."
Health New Zealand has published a
list of locations
the ferry worker was at while infectious from 3-5 May on its website.
All locations of interest are in Auckland.
Anyone who may have been exposed to the disease or has symptoms should call their GP and seek healthcare advice.
Measles symptoms include fever, coughing, a runny nose and watery pink eyes. Those infected can also get small white spots on the back of their inner cheek.
Symptoms start between seven and 18 days after exposure.
Those infected with measles should isolate and stay away from work and school.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

RNZ News
36 minutes ago
- RNZ News
Navigating New Zealand's ableist health system with a disability
Photo: 123RF Julie Woods has navigated the world without sight since 1997 - but it is New Zealand's healthcare system that has most often left her in the dark. "For so long now, we've been getting our appointment letters in print, which - as a blind person - just seems so ridiculous," she said. "I received a letter from ACC in print and when I called them to say, 'This is not my preferred format - could you please email it to me?', they said, 'No, we can't do that'." Woods said there seemed to be a lack of awareness from healthcare workers, when it came to dealing with people who were blind - such as when an ophthalmologist handed her printed pre-operative instructions before cataract surgery, or when she was asked to fill out a printed meal form at the hospital, only for the catering team to later place the meal in front of her without saying a word. "It's the importance of saying who you are when you come into the room, [and] saying that you're leaving the room and when you come back," she said. "There are so many people that come into that hospital setting who, all of a sudden, start touching you or talking to you. You don't know who they are and you don't know whether they're talking to you." Julie Woods. Photo: julie woods Woods also called for medication to be labelled in braille. "When I go to the pharmacy and pick up my medication, it comes in a big bag," she said. "The way I can identify my medication is by the shape of the box or the size of the tube, or the feel of the tablet. "I can't tell what they're for. I just recognise them by the shape - and that's not ideal. "I had two tubes of ointment - one was for my vagina and one was for my face, and I couldn't tell which was which." At Access Matters Aotearoa's webinar on Wednesday - part of their Kōrero for Change series - Donald Beasley Institute junior research fellow Umi Asaka said experiences like Woods' were part of a wider problem within New Zealand's healthcare system. While Health Minister Simeon Brown announced that Cabinet had approved a suite of amendments to the Pae Ora (Healthy Futures) Act 2022 on Saturday , none of those were for people with disabilities. The medical model of disability was rooted in disablism and ableism, Asaka said. "It says that disabled people should have medical intervention to change our body and mind to become as close to non-disabled people's body and mind. "There are lots of different treatments within healthcare system that are - of course - needed, but there are also other treatments that are about making our bodies and mind fit into this ableist society." New Zealand's health system is even worse for Māori, who - at the end of May - had told the Waitangi Tribunal that the health system was failing them . Dr Huhana Hickey, a claimant in the Waitangi Tribunal's inquiry into the disestablishment of Te Aka Whai Ora - the Māori Health Authority - had been working with Te Aka Whai Ora to ensure there was a voice for Māori with disabilities, before it was disestablished. "Disabled people aren't faring well - but the most deprived demographic - and the last time Ministry of Health did this was in 2001, so it shows you they didn't want to show it again - was Māori disabled. "Then halfway down on that graph, it was Māori non-disabled, second most deprived. Dr Huhana Hickey. Photo: RNZ / Alexander Robertson Health New Zealand disability strategy head Rachel Noble said New Zealand's health system was "ableist by nature". "The individuals who work within Health New Zealand are, on the whole, very willing to create inclusive and accessible health services, but they're not sure how and there are many systems within the system that need to be addressed." Noble said Health New Zealand needed to "change the narrative". "That means reframing the way we think about disability in health to become inclusive and accessible for disabled people - to be responsive and relevant." She said Health New Zealand had committed to promoting the disability model of care, developing a tool that would allow people with disabilities to communicate their accessibility needs for healthcare appointments, and engaging with the community to inform service improvements. Noble added that there were also resources that Health New Zealand already had in place, which she had personally used, such as the "I am deaf" card. "I showed it to the receptionist, and straight away her body language changed, and she adapted how she communicated with me. She also took that card and passed it on to the next person, who passed it on to the next person," she said. "By the time I left that appointment, I didn't have the stress of having to justify or explain myself. I didn't have to teach people on the way. "They were all really able to accommodate me, which meant I left feeling like a human being - and I think that's the feeling that we want to create for everyone." Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

RNZ News
an hour ago
- RNZ News
Dr Matire Harwood now a professor at Waipapa Taumata Rau
This week Dr Matire Harwood became a professor at Waipapa Taumata Rau, Auckland University's School of Medicine. She continues to combine academia with her mahi as a GP. When she was a young girl her grandfather told her she would become a doctor eventually she earned a Bachelor in Medicine, became a GP and earned her PHD in 2011. Dr Harwood says whanau encouragement was important as was the influence of a female school science teacher in Australia who wore stilettos and drove a hot rod.

RNZ News
7 hours ago
- RNZ News
Regulatory Standards Bill will stop lawmakers considering broader public health, warns cancer specialist
The Bill is part of ACT Party leader David Seymour's coalition agreement. Photo: RNZ Graphic / Nik Dirga The Regulatory Standards Bill will stop lawmakers from taking broader public health considerations into account, warns a leading cancer specialist. ACT Party leader David Seymour said the Bill - part of its coalition agreement with the National Party and New Zealand First - was about requiring governments to be more "transparent" about the financial impact of legislation. However, Auckland University associate professor George Laking, a medical oncologist and clinical Māori director in the Centre for Cancer Research, said the real intent seemed to make economic factors the only measure. "We already have transparency around lawmaking - that's why we have regulatory impact reports," he said. "This seems more like an attempt to narrow the frame for what's considered to count as being relevant in that type of decision." He joined other public health and legal experts, who have criticised the bill (in its current form) as allowing tobacco, alcohol industries or environmental polluters to seek compensation, if future legislation costs them profit. Associate professor George Laking from Auckland University. Photo: Supplied "You wouldn't want your surgeon to operate with a blunt instrument, but that's exactly the approach the Regulatory Standards Bill takes to the health needs of our society," Laking said. "I acknowledge ACT's faith in market-based solutions, but it is well known that markets fail. That's why the government should be very careful about market deregulation, when human health is at stake." The Bill also appeared to be a covert attack on the principles and articles of te Tiriti o Waitangi, he said. "The situation we have is quite inequitable in terms of distribution of wealth and power in society, and that's a big reason why government needs to be able to take into account a wider set of principles, than rather just the narrow, market-based, productivity-based ones that ACT likes to focus on. "The definition of 'liberty' begs the question of whose liberty - the ability to pollute the environment, to get people hooked on addictive substances, that's one side of the liberty coin. "The pursuit of short term economic gain is not necessarily the recipe for an harmonious society." Public submissions on the Regulatory Standards Bill close at 1pm Monday, 23 June 2025. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.