The New Zealand Herald

Health app goes NZ-wide

- Simon Collins

Neducation ew Zealand’s biggest private childcare chain has signed up to Dr Lance O’Sullivan’s health-by-email service, amid mounting concerns for preschoole­rs’ health in low-income communitie­s.

BestStart Educare, which runs 280 centres from Kaitaia to Invercargi­ll, will roll out O’Sullivan’s iMoko health service nationwide. It runs ABC, EduKids, TopKids, Montessori, First Steps, Early Years and Community Kindy and former Health Minister Tony Ryall has just been named as the group’s new chief executive.

O’Sullivan, who was Kiwibank’s New Zealander of the Year in 2014, started offering medical diagnoses and prescripti­ons to children at remote Northland schools by video link and email from his Kaitaia general practice in 2012.

He started a further trial last year in 10 South Auckland kindergart­ens, which now also includes five kindergart­ens in West Auckland, and is planning a trial with 15,000 children in Otago ¯and Southland.

KiNZ Otara manager Lisa Frank, who initiated the South Auckland trial after hearing O’Sullivan speak last year, said her centre had used the service about 50 times for its 50 children since the trial started nine months ago.

“They are getting the right medicines in a timely way. That means we have less absence from the centre, which obviously supports their learning,” she said.

All teachers in the centres have been trained in using the iMoko app.

“When we notice a child with a skin infection or head lice, we can do an iMoko health assessment,” she said.

“We take their weight, height and temperatur­e, and we do a descriptio­n of what’s happening for that child and take some photos and we send all that informatio­n through to the team, and the team assesses whether there is any interventi­on necessary.

“Most of the children do have to have antibiotic­s or some creams. The team sends a prescripti­on to the pharmacy and then the parent goes to the pharmacy to pick them up, or sometimes if the parent can’t go we will go ourselves.”

Frank said the iMoko team usually rang within 20 minutes of receiving a referral.

She said it was “absolutely wonderful” that the service was going nationwide in BestStart centres.

It’s a massive step up for iMoko, which has just moved its base from Kaitaia to Auckland and hired informatio­n technology entreprene­ur Jodi Mitchell as its new chief executive to lead its expansion nationwide.

It comes as a new Ministry of Education evaluation of targeted funding for centres with at-risk children has found 70 per cent of the centres face “a major challenge” of children with respirator­y and skin infections.

Seventy per cent of the centres also reported increased use of drugs in their communitie­s, contributi­ng to “high cases of head lice, dirty clothes and dirty nappies”.

“One service reported [occasions] where teachers needed to wash children’s clothes for them,” the evaluation says. “One service reported bite marks on teachers and another reported that, after [a violent outburst], another child required stitches.”

HWatch the video at nzherald.co.nz

 ?? Photo / Brett Phibbs ?? KiNZ Otara’s ¯ Lisa Frank measures 4-year-old Yaron Koehler to add to his iMoko medical informatio­n.
Photo / Brett Phibbs KiNZ Otara’s ¯ Lisa Frank measures 4-year-old Yaron Koehler to add to his iMoko medical informatio­n.
 ??  ?? Dr Lance O’Sullivan
Dr Lance O’Sullivan

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