
6 May 2026
Credibility is built on relationships
Justin Butcher writes about what it actually takes to make progress in rural primary care, and why trust, experience and relationships are at the centre.
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Pinnacle partners with Practice Plus to provide same day virtual after-hours GP appointments for enrolled patients, as an extension of our regular medical centre team.
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1 August 2023

Ko te manu e kai ana i te miro, nōna te ngāhere. Ko te manu e kai ana i te mātauranga, nōna te ao.
The bird who partakes of the miro berry owns the forest; the bird who partakes of education owns the world.
Katoa, a new customised app, will make it easier for Pinnacle staff and the Midlands Health Network to learn and use Māori language, culture and customs in their day-to-day work.
Developed by Pinnacle and local technology provider KIWA Digital, Katoa aims to support Pinnacle’s efforts to build a culturally aware health workforce across the entire network.
KIWA’s managing director, Steven Renata, launched and showcased the Katoa app on 1 August, the 36th anniversary of te reo Māori as an official language in Aotearoa, at Pinnacle’s monthly staff hui.
Katoa provides information including tikanga for settings such as marae protocol, written and pre-recorded pronunciation of ngā kupu Māori (Māori words), karakia and waiata for meetings, and dialectical differences.
There is also functionality to complete and record pepehā and mihi, a sign language video to Purea Nei, one of the waiata on the app, and a kuputaka / glossary of Māori words that describe the language of patient wellbeing, practice-based roles, and other conversational words.
The app is a welcome extension to Pinnacle’s health equity policy and cultural competency framework, and an important part of the organisation’s commitment to healthcare equity and Te Tiriti o Waitangi.
There are more than 93,000 Māori patients registered with practices across the Pinnacle network, engaging with a predominantly non-Māori health workforce for their health and disability needs.
Katoa is freely available to the network via the iOS and Android stores and can be used on any smart device. Once downloaded it can be used offline 24/7.

6 May 2026
Justin Butcher writes about what it actually takes to make progress in rural primary care, and why trust, experience and relationships are at the centre.
Read more
29 April 2026
Investing in Māori and Pasifika health workforce development help address persistent health disparities.
Read more
23 April 2026
Fresh thinking, new ideas and challenge can be healthy. But primary care is too important to be reduced to branding, slogans, or simplistic claims.
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