https://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/PO2108/S00051/health-research-council-throwing-millions-at-woke-nonsense.htm
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Health Research Council Throwing Millions At Woke Nonsense
Monday, 9 August 2021, 2:02 pm
Press Release: Taxpayers' Union
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The New Zealand Taxpayers’
Union is challenging the value of
the
latest round of research grants funded
by the Health Research Council.
Union
spokesman Jordan Williams says, “Compared to last
year’s grants, we’ve noticed a big shift towards
‘wellbeing’-centred research that is often, frankly,
woke nonsense. Research in the hard medical sciences is
forced to compete for the same pool of funding as vague and
uber-PC academic papers about decolonisation,
intersectionality, and traditional Māori
knowledge.”
Examples of grants approved in 2021
include:
- $1.2 million examining the lived
experiences of intersectional ethnic minority
youth
- $5 million on iwi-led research explaining how
partnership models can improve the health
system
- $1.1 million using the lunar calendar to help
Māori connect with their environment
- $387,000
providing gay teenagers with “decolonising and mātauranga
Māori-informed bodies of knowledge”
- $258,000 to
“decolonise the western construct of pharmacist
services”
- $150,000 to design a virtual reality
video game about foetal alcohol syndrome
“This
spending is an insult to New Zealanders stuck in surgery
wait lists or seeking access to life-saving drugs. Deep
down, Andrew Little must know this is an embarrassing use of
taxpayer funds. It’s telling that he opened his
statement about the grants by praising the research on
cancer, diabetes, and heart disease, conspicuously skipping
over the millions handed out to projects that would be
received with derision by New Zealanders navigating our
bureaucratic health system.”
“Inevitably, the
vested interests profiting from this funding will accuse us
of unfairly targeting ‘diversity’ focused grants. But
it’s simply the case that intersectionality and
‘mātauranga Māori’ dominates the list of projects. If
we ignored the woke grants, there wouldn’t be many
left!”
“The most incredible part of this spending
is that’s it’s happening during a global pandemic.
You’d think the Health Research Council would be focused
on that, but of the 173 grants awarded this year, only seven
mention COVID-19.”
The Health Research Council gives
out around $126 million in funding per year. Below is a list
of questionable grants from this
year.
- Intersectional ethnic minority
youth: harnessing creativity for health
gains
Approved budget: $1,199,984
our
study engages with Asian, Middle Eastern, Latin American and
African youth to explore how their varying social
identities, including gender diversity, sexuality,
migration, and interactions with health, education and
social sectors, intersect with their lived experiences of
being from non-dominant ethnic
groups.
- Kia puawai ake ngā
uri whakatupu: flourishing future
generations
Approved budget:
$4,999,949.60
This collaborative programme of
research, hosted by an iwi-owned research centre, comprises
an integrated suite of Māori-led studies that seek to
contribute to the achievement of equitable health outcomes.
The programme will explore the positive change that can
occur when Māori have the opportunity to drive solutions
and work in authentic partnership
models.
- Te Maramataka -
restoring 'health' by reconnecting with Te
Taiao
Approved budget: $1,125,097.05
The
maramataka [lunar calendar] is a system our tūpuna used to
connect environmental tohu to certain activities – some
days were better for intense work, while others were
considered ideal for rest and ‘giving back’. … This
study aims to … co-design a maramataka-based
‘intervention’ that will support Māori to connect with
te taiao [the environment] in uniquely Māori
ways
- Kia taiohi te
tū
Approved budget: $386,985.00
Little is
known about the needs and experiences of taiohi [teenagers]
growing up in te reo Māori-speaking whānau and with regard
to intimate relationships, gender and sexualities. … This
kaupapa Māori research is a mana whānau project which aims
to build whānau-centred bodies of knowledge that
incorporate the successes and challenges whānau are
experiencing in using mātauranga Māori [Māori knowledge]
to support taiohi on their journeys. … providing access to
decolonising and mātauranga Māori-informed bodies of
knowledge.
- He tono whakapiki
ora: Whānau and pharmacists’ knowledge
exchange
Approved budget:
$258,471.00
Informed by a kaupapa Māori paradigm, the
research will examine the intersect between pharmacists and
mātauranga Māori [Māori knowledge] in a contemporary
context to attempt to decolonise the western construct of
pharmacist services.
- Walk a
mile in their shoes - Developing a virtual reality
experience of FASD
Approved budget:
$150,000.00
We propose to 1) use novel data collection
methods to capture everyday lived experiences of FASD [Fetal
Alcohol Spectrum Disorder] individuals, and 2) using the
data gathered, develop and test if the VR game can raise
awareness and foster positive attitudes toward individuals
with FASD.
- Exploring the role
of Tongan faith leaders in influencing
wellbeing
Approved budget: $84,033.00
The
proposed doctoral study will investigate the role of faith
leaders in influencing the wellbeing of Tongan people living
in Aotearoa.
- Te Kura Mai i
Tawhiti - kaupapa Māori early years provision and health
outcomes
Approved budget:
$1,199,860.64
Our proposed research is led by Māori
and draws on mātauranga Māori and Western science. …
Findings will help address the need for proven interventions
for tamariki Māori that strengthen culturally relevant
positive behaviours and can be rolled out
nationally.
- Aho Tapairu:
Developing a mana wahine wellbeing
toolkit
Approved budget: $394,035
I am a
kaupapa Māori mana wahine researcher committed to projects
motivated by decolonial and transformatory agendas. My
background is in revitalising customary Māori knowledge as
healing interventions for Māori women and their whānau
today. … I am also committed to overturning derogatory
colonial redefinitions of Māori femininity that leads to
poor sexual and reproductive health outcomes for Māori
women and girls. … I will also create a framework for
Māori women to recover their own tikanga and ceremony as
healing interventions.
- Pacific
Islands Families: Thriving Pacific Young
Adults
Approved budget: $1,199,365.95
The
Pacific Islands Families: Thriving Pacific Young Adults
(PIF: TPYA) study seeks to explore how cultural identity,
family functioning, and employment impact the mental
wellbeing of a cohort of 850 Pacific young adults (aged 22
years).
- A kaupapa Māori
analysis of Māori cannabis and methamphetamine
use
Approved budget: $554,400
I have a
deep commitment to improving Māori health outcomes through
kaupapa Māori health research. This is reflected in my
career development to date, with 15 years' experience in
Māori and indigenous health research, including the
completion of a PhD in public health exploring the potential
of rongoā Māori [traditional healing]. The proposed
postdoctoral fellowship includes a kaupapa Māori analysis
of the multiple dimensions of Māori cannabis and
methamphetamine use.
- Kia
taiohi te tū
Approved budget:
$386,985.00
Little is known about the needs and
experiences of taiohi [teenagers] growing up in te reo
Māori-speaking whānau and with regard to intimate
relationships, gender and sexualities. … This kaupapa
Māori research is a mana whānau project which aims to
build whānau-centred bodies of knowledge that incorporate
the successes and challenges whānau are experiencing in
using mātauranga Māori [Māori knowledge] to support
taiohi on their journeys. … providing access to
decolonising and mātauranga Māori-informed bodies of
knowledge.
- Collaboration for
child wellbeing
Approved budget:
$890,709.00
This grant supports collaboration for
child wellbeing. … With the Manaiakalani Kahui ako, we
will adapt and test a play-based intervention to improve
self-regulation so it is culturally-grounded, engaging, and
developmentally
scaffolded.
- Experiences of
children and their families during the COVID-19
pandemic
Approved budget: $242,645.00
This
project aims to explore the experiences of children, young
people and their families during the COVID-19 pandemic in
the UK with a health equity
lens.
- A smart toothpaste for
the twenty-first century
Approved budget:
$150,000.00
A novel bioactive smart toothpaste will be
prepared using bioceramics and a natural anti-inflammatory
and antimicrobial agent will provide an inexpensive
clinical-grade formulation to mitigate oral infections and
ensure implant longevity while also offering the traditional
benefits of plaque removal and whiter teeth. The affordable
and easily accessible smart toothpaste will significantly
improve the oral health of all communities in New Zealand
and across the
world.
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