East Auckland resident, Howick Native Board member and amputee Katrina Bungard has obtained a operating blade that’s allowed her to return to a sport she had to surrender when she misplaced one in every of her legs to most cancers as a toddler.
She’s working with prosthetist Lizzie Carey, who’s helping Kiwi amputees with their wants on a personal foundation.
“The present synthetic limb funding and companies in New Zealand don’t enable for equitable outcomes for all amputees,” Bungard says.
“There are large disparities primarily based on funding pathways, ACC and Ministry of Well being (MoH) funding variations.
“I’ve just lately been supported by Lizzie to win funding from a United States company to fund a sports activities operating blade limb, which is one thing that isn’t funded for MoH sufferers throughout New Zealand, though it’s for ACC sufferers.”
Bungard says there are two essential pathways for amputee funding in New Zealand.
ACC-funded amputees typically have entry to extra complete funding packages, together with help for sports activities and activity-specific prosthetics, in addition to osteointegration surgical procedure, whereas MoH-funded amputees face extra restrictive funding standards, she says.
“Sports activities blades and different specialised gear are sometimes not funded. Neither is life-changing surgical procedure similar to osteointegration, creating inequity.
“This disparity highlights an ongoing inequality throughout the incapacity sector, the place the reason for an individual’s incapacity, fairly than their wants or aspirations, determines the help they’re eligible for.”
She says Carrie is a personal medical prosthetist who’s been a vocal advocate preventing the “monopolised and restrictive funding system for amputees in New Zealand”.
“She’s labored to boost consciousness of the inequities between ACC and MoH amputee funding streams, in addition to the monopoly of the present system that forces amputees to make use of the one service offered by MoH (Peke Waihanga), fairly than permitting them to decide on different funding suppliers, similar to a personal prosthetist, for his or her care.
“This doesn’t make sense contemplating the overwhelmed well being system and the very fact amputees might be ready weeks or typically months for appointments to type out their synthetic legs, which in the event that they’re not working correctly can severely affect on their potential to proceed with their every day lives.
“Lizzie has supported many amputees find different avenues for funding when Authorities programs fall quick.”
Bungard says Carey has helped her join with the Challenged Athletes Basis (CAF) within the US and thru it she’s been in a position to safe a operating blade, “one thing that may not have been attainable by MoH funding”.
“This has been life-changing, because it allowed me to return to athletics, a sport I liked as a toddler earlier than I misplaced my leg.”











