Diabetes Grants in New Zealand: Funding for Diabetes Prevention and Management

Diabetes — both Type 1 and Type 2 — is one of New Zealand's most significant health challenges. Type 2 diabetes disproportionately affects Māori, Pacific, and South Asian communities. Grants fund prevention, education, management support, clinical services, and equipment. This guide covers the key funding sources.

Diabetes New Zealand

Diabetes NZ funds and advocates for diabetes:
- Community diabetes education: Diabetes management education
- Diabetes awareness: Prevention and early detection
- Advocacy: Policy and funding advocacy for people with diabetes
- Regional offices: Support and education nationally

Diabetes NZ is the key partner for community diabetes programmes.

Te Whatu Ora / Health New Zealand

Health system diabetes funding:
- Diabetes management: PHO-funded diabetes nurse and dietitian services
- Retinal screening: Diabetic eye disease screening programme
- Foot care: Podiatry for diabetes complications
- Renal care: Kidney disease from diabetes
- Insulin and medication: Pharmac-funded medications including insulin

Pharmac

Pharmac funds diabetes medications and devices:
- Insulin: Multiple insulin types funded
- Continuous Glucose Monitors (CGMs): Funded for some Type 1 patients
- Flash glucose monitors: Expanding access
- Insulin pumps: Pharmac-funded for some patients

Access to CGMs and insulin pumps is expanding — know the current Pharmac criteria.

Gaming trusts

Gaming trusts fund community diabetes programmes:
- Four Winds Foundation: Community health programmes including diabetes
- Grassroots Trust: Community wellbeing and health
- Pub Charity: Community health and prevention
- Lion Foundation: Community health

Gaming trust diabetes applications:
- Diabetes education workshops
- Group exercise for diabetes management
- Healthy kai (food) programmes
- Diabetes monitoring equipment
- Community health worker support

Māori and Pacific diabetes equity

Diabetes has a severe equity dimension:
- Te Puni Kōkiri: Māori health equity including diabetes
- Ministry for Pacific Peoples: Pacific community diabetes
- Whānau Ora: Whānau-centred diabetes management
- Pacific health providers: Pasifika health services

Māori and Pacific communities have significantly higher diabetes rates — targeted funding is available for culturally appropriate programmes.

Diabetes prevention

Type 2 diabetes prevention is a funded priority:
- Healthy Families NZ: Community prevention of diabetes risk factors
- PHOs: Pre-diabetes screening and lifestyle intervention
- Green Prescription: Physical activity as diabetes prevention
- Nutrition programmes: Healthy eating for diabetes prevention

Research funders

Diabetes research:
- Health Research Council (HRC): Clinical and community diabetes research
- Diabetes NZ research grants: Applied diabetes research
- University research: Metabolic disease and diabetes science
- MBIE: Health technology for diabetes management

Equipment for Type 1 diabetes

Type 1 diabetes technology:
- Insulin pumps: $3,000–$8,000 (Pharmac funded for eligible patients)
- CGMs: Continuous glucose monitors (funded for some patients)
- Flash monitors: Less expensive glucose monitoring
- Supplies: Test strips, lancets, pen needles

When Pharmac funding doesn't cover technology, gaming trusts and health charities can fill gaps.

Children with Type 1 diabetes

Funding for children with Type 1 diabetes:
- Child and Adolescent Diabetes Service: DHB-funded paediatric diabetes
- Pharmac: CGMs for under-18s with Type 1
- Diabetes NZ: Family support
- Gaming trusts: School nurse support and equipment

What funders look for in diabetes applications

Strong applications demonstrate:
- Population served: People with diabetes by type, ethnicity, and age
- Prevention: Reducing Type 2 diabetes incidence through behaviour change
- Management: Improved HbA1c and diabetes complication prevention
- Equity: Māori, Pacific, and South Asian communities with highest burden
- Education: Structured diabetes self-management education
- Equipment: Specific monitoring and management equipment needs
- Community engagement: Cultural competency and community leadership
- Sustainability: Programme delivery beyond single grant period


Tahua's grants management platform helps diabetes organisations manage grant applications across Diabetes NZ, Te Whatu Ora, gaming trusts, health foundations, and community funders, tracking prevention, management, and health equity outcomes.

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