âHeterosexuals are coming through that have been diagnosed, the number is increasing,â Stewart said.

She was also concerned about the rising number of transmissions locally.
The latest annual data from the University of Otago Aids Epidemiology Group showed the number of people in Aotearoa living with HIV in 2023 increased by 235 â up 74% on the previous year â to an estimated total of 3272.
Of the 97 people diagnosed in New Zealand in 2023, 10 were in the Bay of Plenty and 17 were infected via heterosexual contact.
Fifteen per cent of people with HIV in New Zealand were MÄori and Pacific, however, research showed they were more likely to be diagnosed late and have advanced infection.
Stewart said MÄori men were a growing population contracting the virus and stigma around maintaining sexual health had deterred them from seeking medical care.
That also put their sexual partners at risk.
âItâs just not with MÄori, when somebody steps out of the relationship and then steps back in, carrying that virus is always a concern,â she said.
Women may not know they were living with HIV because they were not getting checked regularly.
âNinety-nine-point-nine per cent of the time, heterosexual MÄori women are diagnosed late because they donât fit the risk group.
âSo theyâre not being diagnosed until they present with symptoms or theyâre having a child,â she said.
Everyone should get tested once, and people with multiple sexual partners should be tested regularly, Stewart said.
As an advocate for the MÄori, Pasifika and indigenous HIV communities based in Rotorua, she said more needed to be done to support Kiwis living with HIV.
That included more accessible resources to educate MÄori and Pasifika living with HIV and culturally appropriate approaches toward treatment.
In 2022, the Labour Government unveiled an action plan to eliminate the transmission of HIV and deaths in New Zealand by 2030, with Prime Minister Chris Hipkins pledging it would be the first country to eliminate HIV.
Stewart was worried a lack of education nationwide meant this goal would not be achieved.
She said her work was about âensuring that todayâs Government honours that agreementâ.
In a 2022 opinion piece, Victoria University associate Faculty of Health dean MÄori Clive Aspin expressed similar concerns for MÄori women.
âIf MÄori women are not identified as a group at increased risk of HIV and progression to Aids as a result of late diagnosis, the planâs effectiveness in stemming the spread of HIV infection will be severely limited. This glaring omission could easily derail [then-Associate Health Minister Ayesha] Verrallâs goal and instead exacerbate current HIV disparities,â Aspin wrote.
At the end of November, Associate Health Minister Matt Doocey held a breakfast following up with advocates for people with HIV in New Zealand to update them on Hipkinsâ promise to achieve the Stop Transmission 2030 commitment.
Stewart attended, hoping to make progress on having more resources available for MÄori and Pasifika health providers and see a stronger focus on educating the public about what HIV is.
Doocey told the Rotorua Daily Post two prioritised actions were under way: development of an HIV campaign to challenge stigma and discrimination, and development of community-led social marketing to MÄori.
âIt is expected that these campaigns will help to provide more culturally appropriate education.
Doocey said stopping HIV transmission by 2030 was the goal of the HIV Action Plan, âand the Government remains committed to itâ, he said.
He said increasing knowledge of HIV was another theme of the plan.
âThis includes increasing information to improve HIV prevention and care programmes. This is a specific focus of the âCombination prevention and health promotionâ section of the HIV Action Plan.â
Medication allows for a âgood lifeâ
Stewart said remembering to take medication was another challenge for MÄori she had worked with, and high stigma toward HIV in her community was a barrier for some.
She said developments in medication allowed those with HIV to âlive a good lifeâ and it was not âa death sentenceâ.
âEven with a partner.â
She said health professionals were concerned for undiagnosed people.
âIf you transmit it without knowing that you have it, it is not a crime. But if you know that you have it and youâre still continuing to transmit it, then itâs a crime,â Stewart said.
Tapu subjects
HIV was a difficult topic for indigenous people to broach, Stewart said.
âEspecially for MÄori when they hear HIV, they always automatically think about Aids and then automatically think about death.
âYou know how MÄori feel about talking about sex ... we donât. Not in that respect anyway ... itâs quite a tapu subject.
âWeâre talking about a womanâs whare tangata [womb] and the life of an individual, and thatâs really important to us as MÄori,â Stewart said.
Education was important for tackling the rising number of diagnoses in Aotearoa.
Toitu Te Ao offered free blood tests in Rotorua as well as wrap-around support for people living with HIV.
Aleyna Martinez is a multimedia journalist based in the Bay of Plenty. She moved to the region in 2024 and has previously reported in Wairarapa and at Pacific Media Network.