Similar Posts

- Advertisement -

3 Comments

  1. A really good report. I found that the health system as I have experienced has helped me through problems. One child with chronic fatigue syndrome was a problem because it was hard to establish the cause at first, and then get a way forward. We did! I got the help I needed both from the GPs and through being able to get a wee bit of assistance to see specialists quickly. Who helped as much as possible.

    NZ/AO is going backwards and I like your cartoon of an ancient slaughter house. They did things physically and we hurt people psychologically instead I think. Helping individuals to make goals that are achievable and then be rewarded with satisfaction and some other pleasure, would reduce the pervasive illness at all ages. But we have a moribund political system now having have replaced one with a semblance of spirit, with one depressingly unsatisfactory. So thanks Ian Powell for explaining how things are as there is a fog of bland misunderstanding even ignorance about our impossible expectations confronting mendacios policies.

  2. The PHO model wasn’t necessarily all that good per se. Much specialist care or attention was devolved back onto general practitioners/family doctors, who themselves said that they didn’t have the training or expertise to be making some decisions eg like if a “client” needed a colonoscopy.

    Specialists are precisely that, but the philosophy of the PHO appeared geared to cut back routine public hospital services, although they’re still pretty good in emergencies. The fact that public hospitals now have customer service reps to process GP referrals, rather than trained medical people,
    can’t be described as best practice. And if a GP is a lousy letter writer, it’s even worse.

  3. Interesting Snow White – you sound as if you know about the situation.
    My relation was involved working in a clinic in Auckland and noticed how many people want to pile into the medical system once they have arrived to live here from overseas. I’m concerned that is one of the advantages attracting people here and causing them to pay what are high fees for the pleasure. We may not front up afterwards with the promised services. And NZs are pushed back – like we aren’t really top priority in the country we live in.

Comments are closed.