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Letters to the Editor: hospital beds, Kaikorai stream, Census
Letters to the Editor: hospital beds, Kaikorai stream, Census

Otago Daily Times

time07-05-2025

  • Health
  • Otago Daily Times

Letters to the Editor: hospital beds, Kaikorai stream, Census

Today's Letters to the Editor from readers cover topics including plan to reduce hospital beds for elderly, Kaikorai stream and Census stats. Reduction in beds will add to aged care crisis The decision by the current government to significantly reduce dementia and psychogeriatric capacity in the new Dunedin hospital will add to the growing crisis for care of the elderly in Otago and Southland. For decades, aged residential care facilities have provided a ''moat'' around the public health system, protecting hospitals from a major influx of long-term elderly patients, with public hospitals dealing only with the overflow. This moat is now rapidly disappearing. Demand for aged care is rising as baby-boomers move through to later stages of life, but a broken government funding system means aged residential care is failing to keep up with demand. The sector has become increasingly less viable, and no new conventional aged care capacity is being built. Growing demand will not be met by the aged residential care sector, and the public hospital system will provide even less of a backstop. Residents and families seeking appropriate dementia and psychogeriatric care will struggle to access the services they deserve. It is disgraceful that our seniors, who have contributed so much to the communities we enjoy today, will pay the price for inept decision-making and lack of insight. Malcolm Hendry Chief executive, Birchleigh Residential Care Centre Actions and inaction In your Saturday edition (ODT 3.5.25) the Prime Minister says ''six years of a Labour government of utter inaction didn't deliver a single thing for the people of Dunedin on the Dunedin Hospital''. Has he not seen the all but completed out patients building that was initiated and nearly all built during the Labour government's term? It is good that the National-led government is carrying on with the build, but why did the PM have to lie? Was it a diversion to cover their cutting back of the bed numbers? Charlie Wilson Green Island Health Minister Simeon Brown has said the new hospital would open with 351 inpatient beds, 59 fewer than originally proposed, but with capacity to expand to 404 beds over time. - Editor. Vaping and health I am an 81-year-old asthmatic. Moreover I also suffer from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Research reveals that young people of 16 and 17 are vaping (ODT 3.5.25) and that this will result in them at that young age progressing from vaping to fully blown chronic obstructive pulmonary disease for the rest of their lives. Furthermore, their lives will be cut short by vaping. Brian Collins Petone Owl lovely What a lovely article about our native owl Maroon Pullover (ODT 2.5.25). Also known as morepork, the ruru was transported to Dunedin after being involved in a car accident in Fiordland. The good people at our Wildlife Hospital and Botanic Garden aviary nursed him back to health, allowing him to return home. What a feel good story - we need more of these. Gaye Ellis Waverley Restore natural streams like Kaikorai stream Thanks Mary Williams for your informative article ''Stream of Toxicity'' (ODT 3.5.25). Shame on all polluters of Kaikorai stream and best wishes to Aroha/Love Kaikorai Valley Trust (AKV). That AKV are working to restore Kaikorai stream back to providing life for macroinvertebrates, insects, fish, eels and birds is great. Why doesn't the Dunedin City Council remove the fence, opening the stream side path between Donald St and Townleys Rd, enabling walking there? Wouldn't it be good to be able to walk beside this and other streams and rivers in Otago? Many enjoy being part of nature, getting outside into our wonderful environment. Thanks to all who help restore natural systems in public spaces. Lynne Stewart Clyde The silent type Interesting to see Doug Hall's response to the planting of a few trees along the edge of the Kaikorai stream by the property he owns. He said more in this article than he did in the whole nine years he was a councillor at the Dunedin City Council. Neville McLay Opoho Double counts confusing and far too broad I refer to an excellent expose by Hilary Calvert on the questions in the last census and a perplexing reply from Stats NZ (ODT 2.5.25) arguing why dual counting for mixed heritage is frankly OK, when it is arguably outside of the Census honesty requirement. The issue is not assisted by the Census question of ethnicity and the further collation of those who ticked Maori (366,015). Those who had further confirmed their ethnicity was actually Maori mixed with European and other non determined races (409,401) were then, to assist Stats NZ, lumped in with Maori as a predominant ethnicity which gives a distorted total of 887,493 or 17.8% of the population. Either Maori 7.4% - 366,015 or being part European/Maori 9.0% - 409,401 ethnicity or heritage should be what Census data and the government Budget appropriations apply funds to and not double dipping. This is definitely misleading towards inaccuracy. Surely in 2025 we are either born here or happy to be a resident in New Zealand and the minutiae of our differences is irrelevant. Basil Walker Queenstown In her letter explaining how Stats NZ uses ethnicity information, Kathy Connolly confuses the issue by claiming Asian and European are ethnicities. These are not ethnicities but broad geographical areas. It is ridiculous to suggest that people from Iraq and Korea are of the same ethnicity. Or that people from Greece are the same ethnicity as people from Iceland. It is estimated there are some 2000 ethnic groups in India, 600 in Indonesia. Apparently Stats NZ decided that using accurate ethnicities was too ''messy'' and so they lump together huge geographical groups which they then falsely claim to be ethnic groups with something in common. This enables the production of meaningless statistics such as the average life span of Asians in New Zealand. R Donaldson Dunedin Address Letters to the Editor to: Otago Daily Times, PO Box 517, 52-56 Lower Stuart St, Dunedin. Email: editor@

A recuperating ruru
A recuperating ruru

Otago Daily Times

time02-05-2025

  • Otago Daily Times

A recuperating ruru

Ruru Maroon Pullover during his rehabilitation stay at the Dunedin Botanic Garden aviary. PHOTO: SUPPLIED Ruru is New Zealand's beloved native owl, often heard at dusk and in the still of the night with their distinctive "more-pork" or "ru-ru" call. Found in forests and urban gardens, the ruru is a nocturnal predator that can be found throughout New Zealand but are less common in the eastern regions of the South Island, south of Christchurch. We seem to have a good population in Dunedin, with many well-vegetated suburbs being blessed with haunting hoots in an evening. Among the wild ruru, one bird's story has captured our hearts at the Dunedin Botanic Garden aviary. Recently, the aviary had a visit from an out-of-town morepork by the name of Maroon Pullover; an intriguing name awarded to this feathered fellow more than 15 years ago when it was banded in the wilds of Fiordland, in the Milford Rd area. His adventures hit a snag after a car strike, in which he sustained injuries that brought him into the capable hands of the Dunedin Wildlife Hospital team before coming to us for some rehabilitation. During his stay, Maroon Pullover was monitored for flight, vision and weight gain. It was a week of rest, recovery and some quiet reflection in a peaceful aviary environment. His known banded mate, Magenta Panties, a ruru of similar age, has had us wondering how she is faring without him. However, the fate of Magenta Panties remains uncertain — whether she is still around anyone's guess. After a week of recovery, Doc rangers took Maroon Pullover back to his Fiordland home territory, hoping he might fly back to Magenta Panties, or perhaps just enjoy the freedom of his wild home once again. Here is hoping the ruru duo reconnects and continues their enduring love story under the southern skies. - By Alisha Sherriff - aviary curator Garden Life is produced by Dunedin Botanic Garden.

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