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Sector leaders help launch public health school

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Thu Mar 25 2010 13:00:00 GMT+1300 (New Zealand Daylight Time)

Sector leaders help launch public health school

Thursday, 25 March 2010, 4:21 pm
Press Release: Massey University

Sector leaders help launch public health school

Leading figures in New Zealand health sector joined the University’s top health researchers to launch its new School of Public Health yesterday.

Professor Sir Mason Durie, a driving force behind the school, told guests, including Health Minister Tony Ryall and Director-General of Health Stephen McKernan, that two clear goals lay at the heart of its establishment.

It aimed to continue “world class research evident now for more than a decade, as well as increase the health work force capability in New Zealand". Sir Mason described the launch of the school, held at the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa in Wellington, as a milestone in health teaching research for Massey.

Head of School Associate Professor Cindy Kiro said the focus of public health at the school was on preventing, rather than treating disease. The school encompasses four research centres at the forefront of increasing expertise and understanding of the impacts of alcohol, tobacco, illicit drugs, non-communicable diseases such as asthma, industrial and occupational diseases, Dr Kiro says. It also looks at cancers and health issues that impact most severely on particular populations groups, such as Maori and Pacific people. “We are here to celebrate that effort and to mark the point at which we can grow,” she told guests.

Mr Ryall said Massey’s research contribution is recognised at a policy level, with the Government acknowledging the university’s health expertise on sleep and fatigue impacts to industry and enlisting its help devising a comprehensive plan to address the use of methamphetamine.

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“With the new school of public health, Massey University will now be even better placed to ensure that politicians and policy makers know how to make scarce health dollars go further," he said.

The centres all have a research focus but also provide supervision for doctoral students and others seeking postgraduate qualifications. They are:
• The Social and Health Outcome Research and Evaluation Centre, led by Professor Sally Casswell and Te Ropu Whariki, led by Associate Professor Helen Moewaka Barnes, both based in Auckland and together known as SHORE and Whariki Research Centre.
• The Centre for Public Health Research, led by Professor Neil Pearce, based in Wellington.
• The Sleep/Wake Research Centre, led by Professor Philippa Gander, based in Wellington.
• The Research Centre for Maori Health and Development, led by Professor Chris Cunningham, based in Wellington and Manawatu.
Caption: Professor Jeroen Douwes (left), Professor Philippa Gander, Professor Neil Pearce, Professor Sally Casswell, Tony Ryall, Associate Professor Cindy Kiro, Professor Susan Mumm, Professor Sir Mason Durie and Professor Chris Cunningham.

ENDS

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