The Government is investing $14 million over seven years into a $37.8 million public-provider research partnership to promote the new area of "precision-driven" healthcare, building on New Zealand's expertise in the health IT sector.
Listed software developer Orion Health and the Waitemata District Health Board, in collaboration with the University of Auckland, are the initial partners with others expected to follow in coming months.
Precision medicine is where all information relating to a person's health and well-being - clinical, genetic, devices, environmental and lifestyle factors - are combined and made available to the patient and health professionals to improve the level of personalised care.
Science and Innovation Minister Steven Joyce and Health Minister Jonathan Coleman jointly announced the new funding, saying the research will help to deliver more proactive and timely personalised care as well as reduce health system costs.
Health research and health IT are strengths for New Zealand, and Coleman said the investment is aimed at producing innovations that can be commercialised globally, capitalising on the international growth in health IT and data analytics.