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  • Top topics digest — the cards score the selected period against the prior 4 weeks.
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  • Coverage gap quadrant — scores the selected period against the 12 weeks before it (not including it).
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  • Outlet orientation strip / lean colours — context-only, drawn from the last 12 weeks of activity regardless.
  • Co-occurrence graph — recent-activity anchored, not picker-driven.
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Topic

Type 2 Diabetes Medicine Access

17 items · 13 aliases · peaked week of 10 May 2026 · first seen 14 May 2026

The National Party supports Pharmac's proposal to expand access to type 2 diabetes medicines by removing ethnicity-based criteria and lowering cardiovascular risk thresholds, aiming to improve health outcomes and reduce hospital admissions for all New Zealanders.

Stance breakdown Methodology →

How the framings classify across 5 articles. Each framing is labelled by a small AI stance classifier; see the methodology page for details.

40%
60%
Supportive 2 Critical 3

Volume by source orientation Methodology →

Stacked weekly counts; colour by lean. “n/a” covers government and iwi-Māori sources where lean isn't applicable.

Alias drift

How this topic has been named, week by week. A new alias winning out is usually a framing shift.

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In the press Methodology →

How the news corpus has covered this same topic over the last 12 weeks. 4 articles from RNZ, Stuff, NZ Herald, ODT, 1News, Newsroom and The Spinoff. Click through to the press view for the full panel.

12-week press volume 4 articles
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Heard on radio

Verbatim segments from politicians speaking on podcasts and radio shows about this topic. Sourced via the voice-reference library — each speaker has been confirmed manually from their voice clip. Click play to stream the original audio from the publisher, pre-seeked to the moment the quote starts.

  • Well, let me get to that. But I mean, first of all, Farmac's whole job is to make sure we're getting the best bang for buck, and I I trust them to do that. But so far as the um uh diabetes, look what's happening is there's a proposal. It's open to consultation uh until next Thursday. It's not actually final, but the proposal is to change the clinical criteria for getting diabetes prevention drugs. And that means that you'll no longer have stories like I've heard many, many times. I went to my doctor, they said, yep, if you were Māori or Pacific, you would qualify for this for free. But because you're not, you have to pay. We've got to stop that. It's so divisive. So instead, uh Farmac are changing the clinical criteria. So around 10,000 more people overall will qualify. About a third of those people uh will be Māori or Pacific anyway. Anyone who's currently on these drugs uh will continue to get them, so nothing's been taken away from anybody. But of course, all the loves and your dear old uh Tianuah uh at one news uh she's misreading the the studies uh from Waikato Uni and and getting into a ladder. But this is actually a positive thing. No discrimination, more access, nobody loses anything.
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Sample framings

Up to 12 framings spread across orientations. Each framing is a short phrase the topic extractor generated to characterise the piece's stance — not a quote from the source. Click through to read the original.

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How the public reacted

Social-media signal on the same topic, drawn from the social lens. Engagement is likes + 2×shares + 3×replies, the same weighting used across the digest cards. View on /social →

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