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Thursday, May 14, 2020

Bob Edlin: Race-based Aging Policy


We are all getting older, but some of us (according to the Minister of Health) are getting older much faster than others.
“Older” New Zealanders have been defined for policy purposes in a press statement that emerged from the office of Health Minister David Clark at the weekend.
And guess what?  Being “older” depends not on when you were born but on your  ethnicity, which is something we define for ourselves.
A distinction between “older” Maori and Pacific people, compared with the rest of the country’s “older” people,  was drawn at much the same time as the government was affirming its  funding of another race-based programme.
The 2020 Budget will include support in the mental health domain for services by Māori for Māori.
But what’s going on with “older” New Zealanders and the way they are being officially defined?
At Point of Order, we were fascinated by the focus on the word “older” (older than what?) rather than “old” (although we agree this, too is problematic).
Then we examined the fine print of the announcement of new funding ($3.5 million) for  organisations supporting vulnerable groups to provide additional mental health and wellbeing support.  And we learned that –
  • Most  of us are “older” at age 70; and
  • Some of us are “older” at 50.
It all depends on ethnicity, according to notes for editors in the press statement –
Summary of additional wellbeing support for at risk communities due to COVID-19
Total funding for the initiatives below is approximately $3 million. This covers the period from April 2020 to 30 September 2020.
One initiative is the targeting of campaigns for priority groups.
The Health Promotion Agency will do this job, which entails:
Multiple campaigns with targeted messaging delivered to communities experiencing particular risks or which are traditionally ‘under-  communicated’ with. Campaigns will be delivered for these priority groups: Māori; Pacific peoples; older people (including people over 70 and Māori and Pacific peoples over 50); people who have chronic health conditions including those who are immunocompromised; and pregnant women and new mothers.
The race base of the policy targeting is double-barrelled.
First, Maori and Pacific groups are the only racial groups described as a priority group.
Second, “older” people are 20 years younger than for other “older” people if they are Māori and Pacific peoples.
We are tempted to wonder when this age differentiation will be applied to eligibility for National Superannuation and the Gold Card.
Yes, we know the lifespans of Maori are lower than they are for the total population.  Whether this explains a 20-years difference is open to question.
But if this is the basis for the distinction drawn in the work to be done by the Health Promotion Agency, why not a gender-based distinction*  too.
Based on death rates in New Zealand for 2017–19:
  • Life expectancy at birth is 80.0 years for males and 83.5 years for females.
  • Life expectancy at age 65 is 19.5 years for males and 21.7 years for females.
  • Life expectancy at all ages reduced very slightly from 2016–18 (allowing for revised population estimates).
Stats NZ didn’t have up-do-date data on ethnicity.
Complete period life tables for 2017–19, including life tables for major ethnic groups, will be published later this year, to  give a more comprehensive picture of mortality and survival trends.
But we could argue that being “older” may well depend on where we live.
For people who died between 2017 and 2019, the median lifespans for both males and females were slightly longer for those who died in the South Island compared with the North Island. South Island males had a median lifespan of 79 years, compared with 78 years for North Island males. Likewise, South Island females had a median lifespan of 84 years, compared with 83 years for North Island females.
Males and females who died in the Nelson region had the highest median lifespan (81 and 86 years, respectively). Other regions where both males and females had higher median lifespans than for all of New Zealand included Marlborough, Otago, Canterbury, Taranaki, and Wellington.
Mind you, this is based on where the person lived when they died and does not necessarily reflect where they spent most of their life.
* Declaration of self-interest:  the co-editors of Point of Order are “older” white males.
Bob Edlin is a veteran journalist and editor for the Point of Order blog HERE. 

5 comments:

Empathic said...

Incredible race-based policy while the gender gaps are ignored, such as lifespan, suicide, homelessness and imprisonment.

Specifically, race-based definition of 'oldness' promises to be a one-way street into further racist privilege and free money rather than trying to address the reasons for faster-reducing health on average in Maori and Pacific populations. Those reasons will include substance abuse and addiction, obesity and family violence.

KP said...

Well, I'm sure enforcing that idea down the chain would solve itself!



Maoris and PIs are not allowed to drink or drive until they are 40, and no sex until they're 36.

Sarah said...

Shouldn't the powers that be construct an "age/gradation" scale according to how "Maori" someone is?

Anonymous said...

If the Minister's party writes this into law it will be the last time they are ever elected. Now, just take note of this: The people the Minister is discriminating against, "white" New Zealand Citizens, are a majority in this country of at least 80 per cent, and don't expect to get their vote at election time this year!

Anonymous said...

Apartheid alive and well in NZ. Lets have a graduated scale. Full Maori age 50, half Maori age 60, one quarter Maori age 65. And every other conceivable option in between. This could be based on DNA testing. We could then match up every other benefit and handout in the same proportion.

Whichever Politician comes up with the radical idea that we are all New Zealanders, and policy should be based on NEED, not RACE, will get my vote - and I suspect a good percentage of the total vote too.

Rob

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