Bake said Burkhardt’s tireless dedication saw her provide life-changing care to hundreds of whānau over a demanding month.
She said the toll of whānau of not being able to access dental services in Te Hiku rests heaviest on its most vulnerable – children aged up to 12 years old.
“There are huge issues in Te Tai Tokerau around the oral caries for kids and our babies. The responsibility on Te Whatu Ora is massive, if you think about where the resource needs to come for that younger age group,” Baker said.
“If we think about all the school-based and hospital-based oral healthcare services in place, our babies are still the ones that are going to go under anesthetic and all the rest of it to get their teeth pulled out. Something needs to shift around Te Whatu Ora’s responsibility.”
She said Te Hiku Hauora has access to funding through ACC for wāhine requiring dental treatment following any kind of trauma, including family harm.
“This is something that we’ve just started, and we’ve seen 30 wāhine so far,” she said.
A comprehensive assessment report of the current landscape in dental care – including challenges, barriers to access, current investment levels and identification of current system gaps – is in development for release this year.
Pivot Consulting director Dr Anna Sutton, who has undertaken the research and literature review for the report, describes the current state of service availability in the Far North as “depressing”.
“We did a stock take of dental services and there are a number, but they are all inundated. I think it will take three to five years to achieve capacity in Te Hiku, even if we start to train our own today,” Sutton said.
Key recommendations to the Government from the Te Niho report include more community-based initiatives targeting tamariki and taitamariki Māori, coordinated approaches between existing dental health services to address equity gaps, the development of a Te Tai Tokerau-wide oral health workforce strategy, and a review of the choice, access and efficiency of oral healthcare service delivery to Māori in Te Hiku.
Taikorihi programme manager JJ Ripikoi said data and insights from the Te Niho initiative will be combined with evidence from the other 12 Taikorihi initiatives to produce a social impact report of the Taikorihi Locality on health investment in Te Hiku.
For more information on the Taikorihi Locality, visit taikorihi.co.nz.