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Minister accepts health system in crisis amid rural hospital staff shortages

Author
Adam Pearse,
Publish Date
Tue, 30 Jul 2024, 1:19pm
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon and Health Minister Dr Shane Reti have been critical of the former Health NZ board. Photo / Ben Dickens
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon and Health Minister Dr Shane Reti have been critical of the former Health NZ board. Photo / Ben Dickens

Minister accepts health system in crisis amid rural hospital staff shortages

Author
Adam Pearse,
Publish Date
Tue, 30 Jul 2024, 1:19pm

The Health Minister admits the public health system is still in 鈥渃risis鈥 as rural hospitals struggle with staff shortages and Health NZ鈥檚 financial position comes under further scrutiny.

Health Minister Dr Shane Reti promises Health NZ is working on how to address Northland鈥檚 Dargaville Hospital, which reportedly has no doctors on-site overnight and is resorting to telehealth services and transporting patients to Whang膩rei Hospital.

It comes as Porirua鈥檚 Kenepuru Hospital also provides telehealth services overnight when doctors aren鈥檛 available, RNZ reported.

鈥淟ook, it鈥檚 never good to not have a doctor in a hospital, that鈥檚 the reality,鈥 Reti said.

Regarding Dargaville, Reti said Health NZ was assessing how nearby hospitals could help staff Dargaville, noting it had been challenging to do so for years. He made similar comments about Kenepuru.

In Opposition as National鈥檚 health spokesman, Reti regularly spoke of a health system in crisis under the previous Labour Government.

He today admitted it was still a crisis under his watch: 鈥淚t was then, it is now.鈥

He couldn鈥檛 state what other hospitals might be in similar positions to Dargaville and Kenepuru.

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon said he expected safe practices within hospitals and acknowledged workforce issues were 鈥渋ncredibly challenging鈥, but he didn鈥檛 say whether he believed conditions at Dargaville or Kenepuru were unsafe.

It added to the scrutiny being placed on Health NZ following the replacement of its board with a commissioner to address what the Government deemed the entity鈥檚 deteriorating financial position.

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon and Health Minister Dr Shane Reti have been critical of the former Health NZ board. Photo / Ben Dickens
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon and Health Minister Dr Shane Reti have been critical of the former Health NZ board. Photo / Ben Dickens

Despite a recent update from Commissioner Lester Levy on the entity鈥檚 cashflow, Reti was unable to clearly explain how Health NZ said it achieved a $196 million operating surplus, which was 鈥$220m favourable to budget鈥, in a quarterly report in March while also finding itself in a deficit of $150m less than expected as stated in a letter to Reti from Finance Minister Nicola Willis later that month alongside an update from Health NZ chief executive Margie Apa.

鈥淭he important part here is up to March, [Health NZ] were saying they鈥檙e on track for their savings target, which was $583 million. Then on March 23, I get a letter from [Apa] saying, 鈥楴o, they鈥檙e not鈥,鈥 Reti said.

He didn鈥檛 explain how this had occurred. The Herald has sought an explanation from Reti鈥檚 office and Health NZ.

Luxon and Reti had taken aim at the former board鈥檚 financial literacy, claiming members had no understanding of cash flow within the organisation.

The then-board included former National Cabinet minister Amy Adams and former Inland Revenue chief executive Naomi Ferguson.

Luxon yesterday said Health NZ鈥檚 senior leadership was also partly to blame as they had been unable to properly brief the board.

He suggested heads could roll but said the decision was Levy鈥檚.

A joint statement from Levy and Apa provided by Health NZ said the organisation 鈥渘eeds time to properly consult and support our staff who are only just finding out what the changes might mean for them鈥.

Labour leader Chris Hipkins continued to put pressure on Reti, claiming he should have been aware he wasn鈥檛 receiving accurate information.

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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