Wools of NZ partners with Asthma & Respiratory Foundation
Wools of New Zealand says it has chosen to partner with the Asthma and Respiratory Foundation NZ in an effort to educate Kiwis around the health benefits of wool carpets.
Gypsy Day is over and now is the time for dairy farming families to register with a medical practice in their new district.
June brings the start of a new dairy season and with it the movement of sharemilkers into and around their new region. However, registering with a new GP is often overlooked when families move into a new area, says WellSouth Primary Health Network GP advisor Dr Keith Abbott.
He says registering is an important part of the move, so health services can be accessed quickly when they are needed. It also means those needing health care will benefit from a subsidised consultation.
The process is simple: fill in an enrolment form with a local medical practice, and give consent for the new practice to source the individual’s health records from their old practice. That way the notes will be there the next time a family member needs to make an appointment.
And if you aren’t registered with any medical practice, now’s a good time to enroll: doctor’s visits are subsidised for enrolled patients, so routine visits are cheaper and certain PHO programmes may even be free.
Doctor visits are free for children under six in Otago and Southland if they registered.
“Medical practices aren’t only there for when you’re unwell; regular checkups and screening are a positive way to monitor and manage health, particularly if you are in a stressful job, smoke or don’t follow a healthy lifestyle,” Abbott says.
Trade Minister Todd McClay says New Zealand has no intention of backing down in a trade dispute with Canada over dairy products.
There have been leadership changes at the Hamilton-based Dairy Goat Co-operative, which has been struggling financially in recent years.
Horticulture NZ chief executive Nadine Tunley will step down in August.
OPINION: In recent years farmers have been crying foul of unworkable and expensive regulations.
Another 16 commercial beef farmers have been selected to take part in the Informing New Zealand Beef (INZB) programme designed to help drive the uptake of genetics in the industry.
Trade Minister Todd McClay says Kiwi exporters will be $100 million better off today as the NZ-EU Free Trade Agreement (FTA) comes into force.