Health Minister Dr Shane Reti is changing his tune on his Government鈥檚 failure to honour its promise to deliver 13 new cancer drugs, admitting it should have been communicated better.
He also accepts that the process National followed in developing the policy ahead of the 2023 election wasn鈥檛 sufficient and didn鈥檛 adequately consider implementation challenges.
Reti maintains that the Government will deliver the policy exactly how it was presented during the campaign, but could only commit to implementing it within the year.
It comes amid a strong backlash from cancer patients and advocacy groups following the policy being absent from this year鈥檚 Budget, even though National had promised the first tranche of funding would start in the 2024/25 financial year.
The Government has since worked to address the widespread public criticism with Finance Minister Nicola Willis confirming the policy would be honoured 鈥渟oon鈥.
In the hours after the Budget, Reti claimed nothing about the policy had changed, given its $280 million price tag over four years was to be funded by reinstating the $5 prescription co-payment, which hadn鈥檛 started.
However, now facing Parliament鈥檚 health select committee, Reti admitted the Government鈥檚 communication should have been better.
鈥淚 take responsibility for the communication, we should have done a better job with that and given patients some sense of direction and sense of hope and timeframe,鈥 Reti told journalists after his select committee appearance.
鈥淲e didn鈥檛 express the hurdles that we had and what the timeframe might be, that鈥檚 clearly what we should have done.鈥
He claimed the policy wasn鈥檛 fully developed ahead of the election, arguing it wasn鈥檛 until he had access to the 鈥渢ools of Government鈥 that he became aware of the complications in implementing the policy.
鈥淭he policy changes that we鈥檇 make, if there were any, was to have a deeper and earlier understanding of the implementation.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 what鈥檚 taken some time to really bolt that down, we didn鈥檛 have all those tools in Opposition.鈥
National鈥檚 policy to fund 13 specific cancer drugs not currently available in New Zealand was sourced from a 2022 Cancer Control Agency report. Some experts and advocates, including those in that report, have questioned whether other or more modern drugs would be more effective.
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon and Health Minister Dr Shane Reti campaigned on the policy ahead of the 2023 election. Photo / Michael Cunningham
Reti said there would be no change to the drugs listed in the party鈥檚 policy, even if different drugs were shown to help more people or be more effective.
鈥淲e had made a commitment to these people and they saw themselves in this policy and so we鈥檙e going to deliver that policy.鈥
He admitted some of the 13 treatments had been unsuccessfully considered through New Zealand鈥檚 drug-buying process - through Pharmac - in the past. The Herald has requested further information from Reti鈥檚 office on this.
Reti denied the Government was promoting drugs that had failed to progress through Pharmac previously.
鈥淭he announcement that we鈥檒l make shortly will describe exactly how we鈥檙e going to deliver this policy.鈥
He wouldn鈥檛 outline when he would explain the Government鈥檚 plans for the policy, except to say it would happen 鈥渧ery soon鈥 and that it would be implemented by the end of the year.
Labour鈥檚 health spokeswoman Dr Ayesha Verrall said the Government had been 鈥渃ruel and manipulative鈥 in how it had managed the policy.
鈥淲hat we heard today was a lot of excuses, which actually all came back to things that were apparent before the election, so it seems to me they had no intention of following through, and then got shocked by backlash.鈥
Verrall, a former health minister, believed Reti was 鈥渟aving his skin politically鈥 by sticking with the policy鈥檚 13 drugs instead of 鈥渄oing what鈥檚 right for patients and getting modern medicines鈥.
Adam Pearse is a political reporter in the NZ Herald Press Gallery team, based at Parliament. He has worked for 九一星空无限 since 2018, covering sport and health for the Northern Advocate in Whang膩rei before moving to the NZ Herald in Auckland, covering Covid-19 and crime.
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