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  1. I have a close whanau member who works for the Auckland DHB who told me their DHB is in one big fat mess.
    Apparently there is inhouse fighting amongst Management and it is so stressful working in this type of toxic environment she wants to leave despite being told to wait as there will be more and better roles for Maori staff. The issue causing angsts is they have to be far more accountable for Maori health outcomes with Maori health being so dismal, so they are tearing each other apart, not exactly a conducive environment for improving ones health.

  2. The mega DHB concept is just cost saving in another guise. The unspoken reason for this review was not improvement in delivery it was to reduce the so called ‘deficits’ being run by DHBs in an attempt to keep up with the unfunded demand caused by large scale immigration and poor social conditions. The actual ‘deficits’ are a small fraction of the total budget and seem consistant across all DHBs. This would indicate a tweak of the funding formulas would be a better plan than wholesale reform. Having lived in a small town where the local hospital is a largely empty shell after previous reforms with minor treatment requiring over an hours drive. I would suggest that centralising more services would leave some rural areas even more poorly served.

    1. Alan all the deficits are caused by the bullshit capitalisation charges the Govts charge DHBs for equipment and New Buildings etc.
      Remove them and the DHBs would have no deficits.

  3. “…focusing the health system on prevention and not just treating people when they are unwell – ‘wellness not illness’ – and ensuring that we use resources to achieve the best value for money.”

    Now: where have I heard this before? Oh yes, that’s right: Annette King, a lot of years ago, when the Clark government came to power.

    As I recall, she had grand plans for primary care obviating the need for much of the secondary care that was then being provided in the nation’s hospitals.

    And – enthused by her vision for the health service – the designers of the new Wellington hospital in the early noughties produced a hospital which was too small. Including the numbers of car parks, given that many patients are older and rely on cars for transport.

    In the current environment, that lack of size has been exacerbated by increasing demand on services. So much for improved primary care services reducing demand on secondary services.

    “….social determinants of health. These are external determinants that drive much of the demand for (and cost of) health services….housing access and quality, educational opportunities, environmental factors, occupation, income level, food insecurity, racial discrimination and gender inequity.”

    These factors aren’t, of course, within the purview of the health sector, which is powerless to bring about improvements in such areas.

    “….hasn’t turned a blind eye to social determinants. Its recent regulations for healthy home standards for rental accommodation….”

    The government’s work in this arena, along with its tenancy law changes, have combined to drive up rents to astronomical levels. So: homes may be healthier, but they’re also unaffordable for many prospective tenants.

    “….establishing a Maori Health Authority with equal decision-making powers within its scope to the Ministry of Health.”

    This isn’t necessary. Ethnicity itself isn’t relevant to need in the health sector. As always, it’s class which is of moment.

    “….a new population health agency….”

    Does the health sector need more agencies? Would this be in addition to, or instead of, entities such as the Ministry of Health? It doesn’t sound as if it’d be effective, and it takes more of the health dollar away from health service providers.

    I’m sceptical about yet more reorganisation in the health sector. From my recollection, what’s desperately needed is more money.

    And perhaps somebody could do some research into the drivers of the current increase in demand, given that the coronavirus has barely made it across the borders. Though I’ll take a guess that it’s got everything to do with the desperate poverty in much of this community.

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