Dr. Sophia Langford

New Paper Explores Māori and Pacific Perspectives on Strep A Vaccine in New Zealand

University Research Highlights Community-Led Paths to Vaccine Equity

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The Persistent Challenge of Group A Streptococcus in Aotearoa New Zealand

Group A Streptococcus (GAS), often referred to as Strep A, is a bacterium responsible for a spectrum of illnesses ranging from common sore throats and skin infections like impetigo to severe conditions such as invasive Group A Streptococcal disease (iGAS), acute rheumatic fever (ARF), and rheumatic heart disease (RHD). In Aotearoa New Zealand, this pathogen disproportionately affects Māori and Pacific peoples, exacerbating longstanding health inequities rooted in social determinants like overcrowded housing, limited access to healthcare, and socioeconomic challenges.

Recent data highlights the urgency: in 2023, iGAS notification rates reached 10.9 per 100,000 population overall, but Pacific peoples faced 37.5 per 100,000, Māori 20.1 per 100,000, compared to 6.9 for European/Other and 5.6 for Asian ethnicities. Hospitalizations for serious Strep A infections cost over $13 million annually in Auckland alone, with around 1 in 2,000 residents requiring care each year. ARF rates peaked at 8.0 per 100,000 in 2023-2024, the highest since 2018, primarily impacting children under 15 from Māori and Pacific backgrounds.

These trends underscore the need for targeted prevention strategies, including a vaccine, as current measures like antibiotic treatment for sore throats and skin sore management fall short in high-burden communities.

A Groundbreaking Publication from University of Auckland Researchers

A newly published study in PLOS Global Public Health titled "Māori and Pacific People's perspectives on Group A Streptococcus vaccine development and delivery in Aotearoa, New Zealand" offers fresh insights into community views on this critical issue. Led by Anneka Anderson from the University of Auckland's Te Kupenga Hauora Māori, the research draws from the Rapua te mea ngaro ka tau (Rapua) initiative, a $10 million government-funded program hosted by the university to accelerate Strep A vaccine progress.

This qualitative study interviewed 20 whānau (family) members and nine healthcare workers from Māori and Pacific communities, revealing nuanced perspectives shaped by historical mistrust, cultural values, and hopes for equity. The findings emphasize community-led approaches to transform vaccines from perceived "symbols of colonisation" into decolonising tools for health sovereignty.

Infographic illustrating iGAS rates by ethnicity in New Zealand, highlighting disparities for Māori and Pacific peoples

Methodology: Kaupapa Māori and Pacific-Centered Research Design

The study employed a kaupapa Māori methodology, prioritizing Indigenous knowledge systems, relational ethics, and community voice. Participants were purposively recruited through community networks in Auckland, ensuring representation from affected whānau and frontline health providers.

Semi-structured interviews explored views on vaccine development processes, delivery models, and integration with broader social changes. Data analysis used reflexive thematic methods, identifying four key themes: historical context and trust, community involvement, delivery innovations, and holistic health integration. This approach not only captured rich narratives but also modeled equitable research practices vital for higher education institutions engaging with underserved populations.

For academics interested in similar culturally responsive research, resources like the University of Auckland's guidelines on academic CVs can help showcase such expertise when applying for research positions.

Key Themes Emerging from Community Voices

The research distilled participant perspectives into actionable themes, providing a roadmap for vaccine programs.

  • Historical Trauma and Building Trust: Many recounted vaccines as reminders of past medical harms, like the 1984 cervical screening issues, but expressed willingness if co-designed with iwi (tribes) and pasifika leaders.
  • Community-Led Development: Emphasis on whānau involvement from lab to rollout, including trials in marae (community meeting places) and schools.
  • Culturally Tailored Delivery: Preferences for mobile clinics, kaumatua (elders) endorsements, and Pacific talanoa (storytelling) sessions over top-down campaigns.
  • Addressing Root Causes: Vaccines alone insufficient; must pair with housing improvements and poverty reduction, lest they "mask" inequities.

These insights highlight the interplay between biomedical innovation and cultural safety, a growing focus in New Zealand universities' public health programs.

Participant Quotes: Authentic Stories of Hope and Caution

Whānau members shared poignant views: "Vaccines could be a tool for our health sovereignty if done right, with our people leading." Healthcare workers noted, "We've seen Strep A devastate families; a vaccine delivered through community hubs could change that."

One Pacific provider stressed: "It can't just be another injection drive; it needs to honor our ways, like using church networks for Samoan families." These narratives humanize the data, demonstrating why higher education research must prioritize lived experiences.

Explore opportunities in New Zealand's vibrant research sector via AcademicJobs NZ listings or research assistant roles.

Read the full open-access study here.

The Rapua Initiative: University of Auckland's Leadership Role

Rapua te mea ngaro ka tau, meaning "seeking that which is hidden," is a flagship University of Auckland project uniting microbiologists, immunologists, clinicians, and communities. Principal Investigator Associate Professor Nikki Moreland oversees vaccine candidate testing, while experts like Associate Professor Rachel Webb focus on pediatric impacts.

Funded by Manatū Hauora (Ministry of Health), Rapua builds lab capacity, analyzes local Strep A strains, and fosters trans-Tasman collaboration via the CANVAS vaccine effort. Auckland's diversity—high Strep A incidence, robust health data—positions it as a prime trial site.

This interdisciplinary work exemplifies how New Zealand universities drive global health solutions. Aspiring researchers can find postdoc positions in infectious diseases through platforms like University Jobs NZ.

Global Context: Strep A Vaccine Development Momentum

Worldwide, Strep A causes over 500,000 deaths yearly, with no licensed vaccine despite decades of research. Recent advances include antibody discoveries protecting against multiple strains and multi-valent candidates in preclinical trials.

New Zealand's efforts align with WHO priorities, emphasizing equity for high-burden regions. Locally, pandemic lockdowns reduced superficial infections and ARF, validating prevention potential.

Region/EthnicityiGAS Rate (2023 per 100k)
Pacific37.5
Māori20.1
European/Other6.9
Asian5.6

Source: Health NZ evidence brief. Such disparities demand culturally attuned strategies.

Implications for Health Equity and Policy

The paper calls for policy shifts: integrate vaccines into primordial prevention like Mana Kidz school programs, update rheumatic fever roadmaps, and invest in scabies eradication to curb skin infections—a key ARF precursor.

  • Enhance surveillance in high-risk areas like Counties Manukau.
  • Co-develop messaging via social media and church networks.
  • Build Māori/Pacific research capacity through university scholarships.

These recommendations position higher education as a bridge between communities and policymakers.

Learn more about Rapua.

Challenges and Opportunities in Vaccine Rollout

Challenges include vaccine hesitancy from historical grievances and logistical hurdles in remote areas. Opportunities lie in leveraging Pacific models like talanoa for education and marae-based trials for trust-building.

University researchers advocate hybrid approaches: rapid antigen tests pre-vaccination, combined with social interventions. Success stories from COVID-19 vaccination in Māori communities offer blueprints.

brown wooden human face sculpture on green grass field

Photo by Michael Jerrard on Unsplash

University of Auckland Rapua team collaborating with Māori and Pacific community leaders on Strep A vaccine research

Future Outlook: Towards a Strep A-Free Generation

With trials advancing, experts predict a vaccine by late 2020s, potentially slashing ARF by 80% in vulnerable groups. Ongoing U Auckland studies map immunity profiles, informing broad-protection formulas.

For higher ed professionals, this underscores demand for experts in equity-focused research. Check higher ed career advice, rate your professors, or browse higher ed jobs and university jobs in NZ.

By centering voices like those in this paper, New Zealand can pioneer equitable vaccination, fostering healthier whānau and inspiring global models.

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Dr. Sophia Langford

Contributing writer for AcademicJobs, specializing in higher education trends, faculty development, and academic career guidance. Passionate about advancing excellence in teaching and research.

Frequently Asked Questions

🦠What is Group A Streptococcus (Strep A)?

Group A Streptococcus (GAS or Strep A) is a bacterium causing sore throats, skin infections, and severe diseases like invasive GAS (iGAS), acute rheumatic fever (ARF), and rheumatic heart disease (RHD). In NZ, it hits Māori and Pacific hardest. Thrive in related research.

📊Why do Māori and Pacific peoples face higher Strep A rates?

Social factors like crowded housing, poverty, and healthcare access drive disparities: 2023 iGAS rates were 37.5/100k for Pacific, 20.1/100k Māori vs. 6.9 European. Prevention targets these roots.

📄What does the new PLOS paper reveal?

Interviews with 20 whānau and 9 workers show support for vaccines if community-led, culturally safe, addressing history and social issues. Part of U Auckland's Rapua program.

🗣️How was the study conducted?

Kaupapa Māori methods: semi-structured interviews, thematic analysis. Focused Auckland communities for authentic voices.

🔬What is the Rapua initiative?

U Auckland-led, $10m funded Strep A vaccine program emphasizing Māori/Pacific co-design, lab capacity, trials. Aims to end hidden burdens.

💉Current Strep A vaccine status?

No approved vaccine yet; preclinical promise with antibodies, multi-strain candidates. NZ trials imminent via Rapua/CANVAS.

🤝How to address vaccine hesitancy?

Community hubs, elders' endorsement, talanoa sessions. Pair with housing fixes. Jobs in public health research.

🏫Role of universities in this research?

U Auckland leads with interdisciplinary teams; builds capacity. Seek lecturer jobs in NZ unis.

❤️Impacts of ARF/RHD in NZ?

93% cases in Māori/Pacific under 30; lifelong valve damage. Costs millions; vaccine could prevent 80%.

🚀Future steps for Strep A prevention?

Equity-focused trials, surveillance, scabies control. Community-policy bridges via uni research. Explore career advice.

🗺️Why Auckland for vaccine trials?

High incidence, diverse strains, data, partnerships. Ideal for efficacy proof.