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  1. My updated Ideas to fix long term illness and health welfare funding.

    1 Create a Medicare agency including accidents and long term illness ( long term being anything outside of your sick leave entitlement).

    2 Place a Medicare Agency social worker in every Doctors surgery ( Why because of the increased workload because of idea 5 6 7 and 9 ).

    3 Fund ALL MEDICINES through the Medicare Agency ( Pharmac funded or otherwise).

    4 Fund all long term illness welfare funding through the Medicare agency ( ie 80% of Minimum wage benefit).

    5 Remove all Long term Welfare illness funding from Winz.

    6 Remove all the relationship rules and limits for all long term welfare illness benefits.

    7 Remove the requirement for 2nd opinion doctors reports as the ACC social worker can discuss it directly with your doctor at the clinic.

    8 Create the agency within the New remodelled Agency of compassionate care to cut double agency costs.

    9 The Agency organises specialist appointments and where an operation in a public hospital can’t be done in a timely manner arranges it in the private sector at Governments cost.
    This should be arranged before leaving the Doctors surgery/clinic.

    10 All medicines on a Prescription ( Funded or Unfunded) should count towards the 20 count, including any repeats, to get Free meds after 20 Prescriptions.

    11 Remove restrictions on diagnostic and maintenance testing that patients require for effective medication dosing purposes.

    12 All ACC SOCIAL WORKERS at a doctors surgery issue a patient with a medicines swipe card to swipe at a pharmacy.
    If a medicine is unfunded ACC pays all but the $5 pharmac fee, if it is Funded the Patient pays the $5 fee.
    Why the card ?
    This is to keep track of the total number of medicines prescribed in any given year and the total cost involved .
    This means all costs will be available from one agency and not as now spread over multiple Dhb’s who have no idea whatsoever of the total dollar cost of unfunded medicines prescribed each year .

    13 Dr visit fees and unfunded Medicines then be funded by a medicare levy, which replaces the current acc levies, we all pay to the Medicare agency including beneficiaries.

    https://thedailyblog.co.nz/2021/07/02/guest-blog-ian-powell-funding-general-practice-in-new-zealand/

    this is point 14 added to my list of things to add to the new medicare agency.
    The medicare agency buys up retiring doctors clinics whose staff are not interested in buying the current clinic they are employed in and the Medicare agency overtime builds a nationwide health Hub GP clinic network that runs on the low cost funding model.

    Then point 15 :
    The new medicare agency charges Pharmac with the responsibility of building OUR OWN MEDICINES PRODUCTION FACILITY.
    I have been told in NZ in 2019/20 $115 billion was spent on Medical research approximately 1/3rd of our total GDP so why are we buying generic’s and importing them ? .
    When we could be producing our own at a much lower cost.
    https://thedailyblog.co.nz/2021/06/27/guest-blog-ian-powell-lets-manufacture-our-own-pharmaceuticals/

  2. Thank you Ian for another enlighting review. It will be interesting to see how the changes develop. I can only hope Minister Little is listening and understands the complexities of what he is attempting.

  3. Considering National crippped our health system as the review confirmed, I’d say Little has listened to the right advice, rather than right wing keyboard warriors whom make fanatical statements without any knowledge of Little or his intellect. But keep banging away, you are all good for a laugh.

    1. Give it up, Bert. Your my-government-right-or-wrong defence of the current inept lot is wearing thin.

      The government is proposing to can DHBs altogether, in favour of something like the UK’s NHS. Which doesn’t work, to the extent that the UK government has been looking to rejig it, so as to make it more closely resemble NZ’s model.

      Be clear-eyed about this government’s weaknesses and its propensity for making dumb decisions. This is the dumbest so far, by a country mile.

      I worked long years in the health sector. In my view, it needs more reorganisation like it needs toothache. What it most certainly needs is MORE FUNDING. Bucket loads of it. And an end to the god-forsaken neoliberalism which has plagued it these many years.

  4. I suspect like many I have no idea what would be the ‘ideal’ way to deliver our Public Health system. What I do know is that ‘revolution’ seldom fixes anything; I am a great believer in ‘evolution’ to rectify problems.
    With the vast amounts of public money flowing into the system it is well past time for a consensus between the political parties on how to move forward. Seems to me National want as much privatised as possible and have no interest in anyone without health insurance. Labour want a nationalised system hoping that with State control a miracle will happen. What is best for us the consumer? The current system is not sustainable and does not deliver consistently across the country. Large parts of it rely on charitable organisations to fill in gaps. Anecdotally many ‘proffessionals’ are doing very nicely out of arrangements with local DHB’s. To continue this ongoing yo-yo between systems just wastes money and time, and costs lives.

  5. Peter and John: there’s no perfect structure for any healthcare system. Every design has flaws. But the DHB model would be pretty good at delivering the services NZers need, if only it were properly funded.

    To the best of my knowledge, it never has been, hence the rise since the 1990s of the health insurance market and the expansion of the private hospital sector. The latter has existed in some form since before I was born.

    The funding deficit goes a considerable way to explain the fact that gaps in service delivery are filled by charities (that hospital in ChCh, for instance). We can do better, but not with a model which resembles the NHS.

    1. Any system can be made to function if endles resources and money are poured into it – this is generally how wars are fought. I’m very suspicious of solutions that say we can make it work if we just had more money. We already spend enormous amounts and I am sure everyone working in the system could identify cost savings. There may be a need for more money, but we need to ensure it ends up at the coal-face and not absorbed by people clicking-the-ticket. I am not convinced that the current DHB and multiple gov depts structure achieves effeciency.

      1. Peter Kelly: “Any system can be made to function if endles resources and money are poured into it…”

        I don’t think that anyone is suggesting that the health system should receive unlimited funding. I’m certainly not. But underfunding of Health, going back many years, is indisputable. I worked there: I saw its deleterious effects every day. And in the years since, it’s worsened; there’s been a lot of publicity about it. Were it not an issue, we wouldn’t have the dire situation with waitlists, people unable to get elective surgeries and timely cancer treatment, staff shortages and burnout, and service gaps being filled by charities.

        I do know that the DHB model would work much better with more funding. And I also know that moving to a NHS model, as the government proposes (our GP rolled her eyes at that news!) won’t be more effcaceous. If it doesn’t work in the UK, why on earth would anyone believe that it’d work here?

        As for the proposed Maori Health Authority: words fail me.

        1. Here’s what I see – by any measure Maori have not had good outcomes from the current system. We can argue all sorts of reasons why that is (including personal responsibility), but if we keep doing what we are those statistics will only get worse. I look at the Waipareira Trust model and see real benefits, so I think a Maori Health Authority is at least worth a try and applaud Minister Little for the courage to do it – the arbitary abolution of DHB’s I’m not so sure about. Like Lester Levy said recently if we don’t get into ‘prevention medicine’ no amount of money will adequately fund the health system.

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