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  1. Davids data is akin to Levy putting this years redundancy costs on the previous Labour governments books, it’s designed for one thing, deception of the highest order. You would expect nothing of the filth that is David Farrar.

  2. Any one know the figure for the last 12 months .I would think it would be way higher as we have had record numbers leaving in those 12 months .And I would think under the current health management we will see way more very experienced specialists and GPs joining the lines at air port checkouts in the next year along with all the newly trained nurses and teachers .

  3. It’s SOP for Conservative governments to starve a government organisation of funds, claim it doesn’t work and then privatise it. And labour being a pale copy of national doesn’t do a hell of a lot about funding either, although they probably don’t want to privatise it quite so much.

  4. > The second biggest group comprises those with 20 or more years after obtaining their medical degrees (14%).
    >
    > This latter group will have overwhelmingly (if not completely) been overseas recruited medical graduates who required further registrar training.
    Yes, a rather relevant point that when you increasingly bring in doctors from overseas who see New Zealand as little more than a springboard to Australia, many of them will… springboard to Australia.

  5. “For RMOs to leave New Zealand’s health system both push and pull factors are required”.

    Not wrong there. Much the same could be said for RNs. The push factors certainly exacerbate the issue but Australia has been in the recent years of globalization a magnet for medical professionals, especially those who have no particular social or cultural ties to New Zealand.

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