Auckland surgeons are now being required to consider a patient鈥檚 ethnicity alongside other factors when deciding who should get an operation first.
Several surgeons say they are upset by the policy, which was introduced in Auckland in February and gave priority to M膩ori and Pacific Island patients - on the grounds that they have historically had unequal access to healthcare.
Health officials stress that ethnicity is just one of five factors considered in deciding when a person gets surgery, and that it is an important step in addressing poor health outcomes within M膩ori and Pacific populations.
Te Whatu Ora - Health New Zealand has introduced an Equity Adjustor Score, which aims to reduce inequity in the system by using an algorithm to prioritise patients according to clinical priority, time spent on the waitlist, geographic location (isolated areas), ethnicity, and deprivation level.
In the ethnicity category, M膩ori and Pasifika are top of the list, while European New Zealanders and other ethnicities, like Indian and Chinese, are lower-ranked.
Some surgeons, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said the new scoring tool was medically indefensible. They said patients should be prioritised on how sick they were, how urgently they needed treatment, and how long they had been waiting for it - not on their ethnicity.
One of the surgeons said he was 鈥渄isgusted鈥 by the new ranking system.
鈥淚t鈥檚 ethically challenging to treat anyone based on race, it鈥檚 their medical condition that must establish the urgency of the treatment,鈥 the surgeon said.
鈥淭here鈥檚 no place for elitism in medicine and the medical fraternity in this country is disturbed by these developments.鈥
A document on the equity adjustor which was leaked to 九一星空无限talk ZB shows two M膩ori patients, both aged 62 and who have been waiting more than a year, ranked above others on the list. A 36-year-old Middle Eastern patient who has been waiting almost two years has a much lower priority ranking.
An email by Te Whatu Ora business support manager Daniel Hayes in April said: 鈥淗i team, Heads up. This is going to be the new criteria for outsourcing your patients going forward. Just putting this on your radar now so that you can begin to line up patients accordingly. Over 200 days for M膩ori and Pacific patients. Over 250 days for all other patients.鈥
When contacted by ZB, Hayes said he would not comment until he had verified who he was speaking to. He did not return further requests for comment.
Health Minister Ayesha Verrall said when it came to prioritising healthcare, there were important reasons why ethnicity was a factor.
She pointed to the Government-commissioned, independent review of the health system in 2018, which found the system did not serve everyone well and produced unequal outcomes, particularly for vulnerable populations.
鈥淭he reformed health system seeks to address inequities for M膩ori and Pacific people who historically have a lower life expectancy and poor health outcomes,鈥 Verrall said.
Sir Collin Tukuitonga, a leading expert in Pasifika health, said M膩ori and Pasifika patients could be moved to the front of surgical lines due to the inequalities in the previous stages of the health system, such as the referral process.
鈥淢膩ori and Pacific people tend to linger on the referral list... and inevitably, I think people will say that there鈥檚 also an institutional bias, possibly a racism that doesn鈥檛 put them where they need to be in order to get the surgery,鈥 Tukuitonga said.
鈥淭he referral pathways are not that straightforward.鈥
Tukuitonga specifically used the example of bariatric surgery, which helps to aid those with morbid obesity, which he said was 鈥渕uch more鈥 prevalent in M膩ori and Pacific communities than in P膩keh膩. He said this could be another reason why these patients are being brought forward in the waiting times.
鈥淔or most of the surgical interventions, M膩ori and the Pacific people don鈥檛 get to get the rates of interventions that might be warranted given their conditions,鈥 Tukuitonga said.
He added: 鈥淚n other words, it鈥檚 not acceptable to have a group in the population where obesity is a major problem and yet they鈥檙e not getting the physical intervention that they require.鈥
Te Whatu Ora interim lead for Te Toka Tumai (the former Auckland District Health Board) Dr Mike Shepherd said the causes of health inequity were complex and required a sophisticated solution to reduce inequitable outcomes that already existed.
鈥淚t鈥檚 important to note that ethnicity is not the only element considered in the scoring system,鈥 Shepherd said.
He said the equity adjuster waitlist score helps reduce barriers and inequities in the healthcare system, to ensure that people have equitable outcomes, regardless of their ethnicity, socio-economic circumstances or where they live.
鈥淭hese adjustments are based on evidence which shows these groups often have inequitable health outcomes, which often begin at the start of their healthcare journey. Early analysis shows the tool is effective at helping to eliminate the existing inequities.鈥
Shepherd said the tool was rolled out in Auckland in February and, due to positive evidence that it is helping to eliminate inequities in the healthcare system, it is now being rolled out across the other northern region districts.
Before the Health New Zealand reforms came into force last year, around half of the then District Health Boards had considered or committed to prioritising M膩ori and Pacific patients for some elective surgeries.
A number of studies and reports show M膩ori and Pacific people are less likely to be referred or accepted for treatment in the first place, and once in the system generally get less treatment. The Auckland District Health Board鈥檚 own data show M膩ori and Pacific patients take longer after referral to have a procedure confirmed.
(With additional reporting by Jason Walls)
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