Māori medical graduate Isaac Samuels wants to make a difference to Māori health.
Just-graduated medical student Isaac Samuels grew up identifying as Pākehā.
But the death of his koro and the University of Auckland’s Māori and Pacific Admissions Scheme fostered his pride in his Māori heritage and vision for improving the healthcare of his people.
Samuels (Ngāti Hauā, Ngāti Tuwharetoa) graduated yesterday with a Bachelor of Medical and Biomedical Sciences (Honours) from which he hopes to specialise in ophthalmology — treatment of disorders of the eye.
He has already researched and developed a kaupapa Māori framework for eye-care consultations, which he hopes will contribute to improved eye care for Māori patients.
“It’s exciting,” Samuels says, “because it shows, if trained properly, Pākehā doctors can provide culturally safe consultations.
“If our clinicians are able to engage in a culturally safer way, then we can be sure Māori will start to achieve better health outcomes.”
Samuels said he had a privileged upbringing in Tāmaki, attending St Kentigern’s College, and regarded Māori as part of his DNA rather than his identity.
This, he said, was confirmed by an “upsetting incident” when he visited the family marae in the Waikato as a child.
“I got chased off the marae because I was Pākehā looking and kids didn’t believe I was Māori,” he recalls.
But his relationship with his whakapapa changed when his koro, who lived with his whānau, became sick with diabetes-related conditions.
“I just couldn’t get my head around why he didn’t want to go to the doctor and why his doctor didn’t look after him very well.”
Seeing his own dad’s distress over not understanding his grandfather’s illness or the medications sparked something in Samuels, where he envisioned how he could use his education and learn the skills to help his whānau, and to be an advocate.
Samuels got into medical school at Waipapa Taumata Rau-University of Auckland through the Māori and Pacific Admission Scheme, and that’s where his understanding of his potential started opening up.
“I didn’t know the extent of Māori health inequity until I heard [Tumuaki] Professor Papaarangi Reid speak in population health in first year. It was all around colonisation and the impacts of colonisation on Māori health and what we can do as Māori health practitioners and how few of us there are around.”
“I thought, ‘oh my goodness, I can help my whanau, but I can actually help all of Māori by pursuing this career, if I can play my cards right and do things that are going to help people’.”
Now he says: “I’m proud to be Māori.”
He also stumbled across ophthalmology on a two-day placement and believed he had found his calling.
Samuels found allies who were also interested in Māori eye health. One of those was Jennifer Craig, a professor of optometry, who supported him to come up with an original research project.
Samuels was awarded a Kupe scholarship, which recognises leadership potential, and he was mentored as part of that by Dr Mataroria Lyndon.
He also met doctoral candidate in optometry and vision science Renata Watene, with whom he went on to collaborate.
At the outset of his research project, Samuels spoke to a large group of Māori people who were either engaged with eye-care services or who had whānau who were.
The biggest theme to come out of that study was the importance of communication and a genuine connection.
“We talked about this concept of whakawhanaungatanga, building relationship. It’s a large reason for Māori knowing their whakapapa, so we can connect things.
“If a doctor comes in and goes, ‘cool, sit down, what’s wrong with you? Okay, sweet. here’s a medication. See you later’. There’s no connection there. So there’s no incentive to return. You don’t know the person.”
Another theme was that patients’ historical experiences significantly informed their healthcare practice and their healthcare beliefs.
“If they have had a poor experience, or a relative has, they are significantly less likely to go and seek care. But, it also works for a positive experience. If a whānau member has a positive experience with care, they’re far more likely to return to care.
“So then we can start to develop positive relationships around follow-up and management strategies for Māori.”
Another theme was the importance of hauora Māori — the concept of holistic Māori health.
“It goes so much further than the biomedical, which is often what we were taught in med school, to the importance of the health of the family, spiritual health, mental health and how that impacts on the physical health.
“It’s really important and it’s often not acknowledged, especially in specialty care. So, in ophthalmology, they’re going to look at your eye. They often don’t have the opportunity nor has traditional practice encouraged us to ask, ‘how are things at home, do you have any stressors going on in your life at the moment or is your spirituality important to you’?
“That’s massive for Māori and massive for building rapport. Clinicians can do this.”
The other important points were around tikanga and tapu; the tapu of the head and the eyes.
“They are sacred parts of the body for Māori. It’s where we connect to our tīpuna and our atua. So touching the head is really full on. It needs to be established through the consent process for Māori.”
Samuels then went on to develop the kaupapa Māori framework. The idea was to provide guidelines Pākehā could use in consultations with Māori whānau.
“We talk a lot about we need to increase the Māori health workforce and we do need to. But that’s years away and we need to fix inequity today.
“What we need to do is equip those who are in the workforce with the necessary tools.”
Samuels is writing up results from a controlled trial of the framework where participants visited three stations and then gave feedback.
There was a Pākehā clinician who wasn’t trained in the framework, but knew how to do an eye exam.
The second was a Pākehā clinician who was trained using the framework and then Isaac who did a full kaupapa Māori approach to an eye exam.
They filled out a questionnaire, ranking each station based on cultural safety, the adequacy and professionalism of the clinician, and provided some qualitative feedback.
The results showed Māori significantly prefer whakawhanaungatanga at the beginning, and adequate communication.
And they appreciated consent around examining the head and touching the face, acknowledging tapu.
Also, being able to allow whānau into the space during the consultation.
“It was interesting, because non-Māori participants felt more comfortable with the framework being used too.
“It differed depending on certain ethnicities. We found a lot of East Asian ethnicities didn’t like the personal aspect of whakawhanaungatanga and thought it deterred from professionalism.
“But a lot of the Pākehā participants said that it added a kindness to the clinical encounter,” Samuels says.
This story is from University of Auckland News and published with permission.