Budget 2016: Green light for screening programme

Jonathan Coleman
Jonathan Coleman

A national bowel screening programme will be rolled out after today's Budget set aside $39.3 million over four years.

The Cancer Society made such funding one of its top wishes for the Budget, with health advocates having campaigned for an extension to a pilot programme running through Waitemata District Health Board.

 $2.2b for health

New Zealand has one of the developed world's highest rates of bowel cancer registration and deaths.  About 3000 cases are registered each year and there are about 1200 deaths from the disease.

Bowel cancer is New Zealand's most commonly registered cancer, and the second most common cause of cancer death.

Survival rates are better for patients in whom the disease is detected at an early stage.

"Once fully implemented, the programme is expected to screen over 700,000 people every two years," Health Minister Jonathan Coleman said today.

"We have been working towards a national screening programme for some time. This investment builds on the successful Waitemata DHB bowel screening pilot, which has been running since 2012."

A business case for the bowel screening roll-out will be put to the Cabinet shortly.

Dr Coleman has previously said the main constraint on creating a national programme would be having enough colonoscopy staff, but schemes were underway to address this.

Once in place, DHBs will offer people aged 60 to 74 a bowel screening test every two years.

More than 80% of cancers found through the pilot were in those aged 60 to 74.

Last year's Budget extended the Waitemata DHB pilot until December 2017.

The scheme involves people taking a tiny faeces sample at home and sending it in a special container to a laboratory for detection of blood that might indicate cancer or pre-cancer. Those who have a positive result are offered colonoscopy for diagnosis.

- NZ Herald 

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