Hawke's Bay Today

Health New Zealand denies it has ordered a hiring freeze

- — RNZ

Health New Zealand denies its guidance to managers to review roles is a hiring freeze, saying it is still recruiting to fill shortages.

The agency has written to health unions outlining guidance it has given to hospitals, including banning double shifts, closing some vacant roles and forcing staff to use leave.

Health NZ Te Whatu Ora said it was clamping down because it could not go into the new financial year operating in deficit as it currently was.

Its guidance for a review of unfilled roles asks managers to “consider permanent removal of these as part of the budget processes”, but chief executive Margie Apa said that was not a hiring freeze.

“Particular­ly where if you’ve had roles that have been vacant for [a number of months] and you’ve been able to function as a service, I think it’s reasonable for leaders to check whether they need that role or whether they need the job carried out in the same way that they might’ve assumed when they thought they needed that role,” Apa said.

Health Minister Dr Shane Reti said such decisions were the responsibi­lity of Health NZ, not the Government.

In a statement, he said this was not a hiring freeze on doctors or nurses at Health NZ and the guidance would not take resources away from the frontline.

In response, Labour Health spokeswoma­n Ayesha Verrall said that was a “stupid statement”.

“I mean it’s absolutely proven to be untrue by the fact Te Whatu Ora has sent out a letter saying that some positions will be reviewed and some of them will be cut.”

She believed the guidance did suggest it was cuts to frontline roles.

“We still have major gaps in medical roles, particular­ly medical specialist roles. Those people are hard to recruit, it takes a long time,” Verrall told Morning Report.

“And just because they haven’t been filled for some time is not a justificat­ion for them being removed, in fact sometimes they are needed because a service on that edge of its sustainabi­lity.”

There was also a lack of transparen­cy on how many jobs this guidance would affect, she said.

“They haven’t thought that they may jeopardisi­ng the ability to fill those roles by saying ‘we’re cutting them or reviewing them’ and delaying the entire process, and that can have catastroph­ic impact for small services that are dependent on these specialist skills.”

Who will it impact?

Apa told Morning Report yesterday Health NZ was asking managers to consider this to be “guidance”, not a directive, in areas where they were fully staffed and had capacity.

“In those areas where they are looking staffed, and they are meeting their full establishm­ent, it’s reasonable, and we’ve asked leaders to consider how they are staffing.

“So we do and are asking leaders to make sure that they are ensuring people are taking leave and breaks . . . and making sure they are returning to some of our previous practices [pre-Covid] of managing staff and rosters.”

They expected managers to exercise judgment depending on the service, Apa said.

 ?? ?? Health New Zealand chief executive Margie Apa.
Health New Zealand chief executive Margie Apa.

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