Overcrowding - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz Catholic News New Zealand Thu, 13 Oct 2022 07:26:51 +0000 en-NZ hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cathnews.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-cathnewsfavicon-32x32.jpg Overcrowding - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz 32 32 70145804 NZ's one of the worst places to bring up a child https://cathnews.co.nz/2022/10/10/statistics-nz-child-poverty-rheumatic-heart-disease/ Mon, 10 Oct 2022 07:02:22 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=152853 one of the worst places

New Zealand is one of the world's worst places to bring up a child, a Guardian newspaper report says. Poverty and overcrowding are leading to life-changing health outcomes. Diseases like rheumatic fever are rife in some communities. Yet - the annual Ministry of Social Development Child Poverty Report found child poverty in New Zealand is Read more

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New Zealand is one of the world's worst places to bring up a child, a Guardian newspaper report says.

Poverty and overcrowding are leading to life-changing health outcomes. Diseases like rheumatic fever are rife in some communities.

Yet - the annual Ministry of Social Development Child Poverty Report found child poverty in New Zealand is just slightly above the median rate in European countries.

Single parent families suffer. Ethnic disparities remain. Maori children are more than twice as likely than average to experience material hardship. For Pasifika children, this affects nearly one in three.

These children are also more likely to become severely ill with preventable diseases.

Rent and housing costs take an increasing portion of household incomes. They disproportionately impact those on lower incomes.

Housing costs for all households with children increased from 15 per cent in 1988 to 22 per cent in 2021. Meanwhile, for those in the lowest fifth, they increased from 23 per cent to 40 per cent.

The worst-hit group was those that rented privately and received the Accommodation Supplement (AS), with almost half of their household income spent on accommodation on average.

The report author, Bryan Perry, says the survey only captured those children in private dwellings. It doesn't include those in accommodation like hotels, motels, boarding houses, hostels and camping grounds.

He said there remained about 60,000 children, or five per cent, in "very severe hardship".

The Guardian newspaper article reported:

Rheumatic heart disease is a disease divided down racial lines in New Zealand - 93% of cases present in Pasifika and Maori children.

Pasifika children are admitted to hospital for rheumatic fever 140 times more often than children of European or other ethnicities.

Maori children are admitted 50 times more often.

Each year about 140 people die from rheumatic heart disease.

Roughly 160 new cases are diagnosed a year. Many go unreported.

"Anything that can be done to remove the inequitable burden of this disease on the population is of the greatest priority.
I look forward to the day that rheumatic heart disease becomes a historic rarity on these shores," David McCormack says.

"As a cardiac surgeon - I had never treated rheumatic heart disease before coming to Aotearoa New Zealand. The grievous impact it has on young lives and whanau cannot be overstated," the UK-trained specialist says.

In other countries, rheumatic heart disease is extremely rare.

Eva Colette's Guardian article describes rheumatic fever as a "deadly autoimmune disease" for which there is no cure.

"It can be painful, cause neurological effects, and can develop into irreversible rheumatic heart disease, requiring long-term drug treatment and, on occasion, heart valve surgery," she wrote.

"On many measures, New Zealand is currently one of the worst places in the developed world to be a child."

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Church will not change teaching on contraception says priest https://cathnews.co.nz/2014/09/19/church-will-change-teaching-contraception-says-priest/ Thu, 18 Sep 2014 19:04:03 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=63229

Nothing will ever change the Catholic Church's stand on contraceptives, says Suva, Fiji, vicar-general Father Sulio Turagakacivi. Responding to concerns by the Catholic Women's League members regarding the church's stand on contraception and the expensive exercise of raising children in a money-driven society in this era, Fr Turagakacivi said no laws or ideology would change Read more

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Nothing will ever change the Catholic Church's stand on contraceptives, says Suva, Fiji, vicar-general Father Sulio Turagakacivi.

Responding to concerns by the Catholic Women's League members regarding the church's stand on contraception and the expensive exercise of raising children in a money-driven society in this era, Fr Turagakacivi said no laws or ideology would change the church's stand.

League members had enquired with health officials during a recent awareness forum if the church's stand was a reasonable one.

Turagakacivi said the church would always respect and preserve the sacredness and dignity of human life from conception and onwards.

He said no laws, ideology, or teaching would ever change the church's stand because the use of contraceptives robs a child's right to life.

He added no one had the right to deprive any child of their right to live.

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Overcrowding serious problem https://cathnews.co.nz/2011/07/08/overcrowding-serious-problem/ Thu, 07 Jul 2011 19:00:59 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=7005

Overcrowding is becoming a serious problem in Kiribati and Solomon Islands and rising sea levels are also expected to lead to further climate change refugees. Australia and New Zealand have been told to expect more migration from their Pacific neighbours. Speaking to Cook Islands, Fiji, Filipino, Hong Kong, Indian, Kiribati, New Zealand, Niuean, Samoan and Read more

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Overcrowding is becoming a serious problem in Kiribati and Solomon Islands and rising sea levels are also expected to lead to further climate change refugees. Australia and New Zealand have been told to expect more migration from their Pacific neighbours.

Speaking to Cook Islands, Fiji, Filipino, Hong Kong, Indian, Kiribati, New Zealand, Niuean, Samoan and Tongan postgraduate students taking part in the AUT-organised writing retreat at Vaughan Park, leading Pacific demographer Professor Richard Bedford, from the Auckland University of Technology, said New Zealand and Australia are obvious destinations for Pacific migrants.

"Long term, I think New Zealand and Australia need to be aware there will be an increasing pressure for opportunities to move to other countries, not as desperate people, but just as people seeking options for their futures," he said.

"In Kiribati, of the 100,000 population, 50 percent live in urban Tarawa while in Solomon Islands of its 500, 000 population, 20 percent live in urban areas," Dr Bedford said.

He described what would happen, what their children would do, and how life would look like in these two island nations in 50 years.

The issue of population growth in these neighbouring islands is being slowly understood in New Zealand, Dr Bedford told a Pasifika writing fono organised by AUT University.

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