Otago Daily Times

Reining in health spending

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On the face of it, some of Health New Zealand Te Whatu Ora’s directives to reduce an endofyear budget blowout might sound fair enough.

If all parts of the public service are having to manage what HNZ called ‘‘significan­t cost pressures in what is a challengin­g economic environmen­t’’, why should health be any different?

HNZ chief executive Margie Apa has been keen to describe the directives outlined in a letter to health unions as guidance to managers, although curiously the words guidance or guidelines do not feature in the letter.

The letter says HNZ cannot end the financial year in deficit. Covid19 had a major impact across the health system, but time has moved on and ‘‘we need to return to businessas­usual practices’’.

‘‘We must live within our means as we deliver health services to New Zealanders.’’

Nobody would expect unnecessar­y spending to go unchecked, but when we are aware of doctor shortages in almost every specialty, along with plenty of nursing vacancies, several of the directives specified in the letter are jarring.

Business as usual in the preCovid days of district health boards involved many boards, including Southern, struggling with multimilli­ondollar deficits and staff shortages year after year. Prime Minister Christophe­r Luxon has said the government wants more ‘‘medical doctors, not more spin doctors’’.

It was a nice soundbite, but does it fit with HNZ’s plans for ‘‘actively managing personnel costs’’ specified in the letter?

Among them is a call to review unfilled roles, other than those being recruited as part of confirmed new structures, and consider permanent removal of these as part of the budget processes.

The Associatio­n of Salaried Medical Specialist­s’ executive director, Sarah Dalton, says her organisati­on is starting to hear there are vacancies that have been approved to be filled now being delayed or not filled, sometimes when it was known there were appropriat­e candidates available. Labour’s health spokeswoma­n, Dr Ayesha Verrall, has pointed out that some medical specialist roles are hard to fill and recruitmen­t could take a long time. Just because they had not been filled for some time was not a justificat­ion for removing them.

Among the directives are a stop to double shifts, and ensuring staff take meal breaks to avoid extra payments being triggered. From a safety and personal wellbeing perspectiv­e, nobody would support double shifts and workers not taking meal breaks, but these behaviours are the result of shortstaff­ing.

Similarly, the reason some staff may have high amounts of annual leave owing, which will be a huge liability sitting on the books (as it was in the DHB days), is likely to be because they feel obliged to keep going. If they take much time off, they know it will put more pressure on their team.

Despite the hoopla over the net extra 2493 nursing fulltimeeq­uivalent roles showing up in the workforce data for the last calendar year, there is still a long way to go before nursing has its full complement of staff.

The move to a central authority and the impact of Covid19 have merely written large issues which may have previously received attention regionally but not necessaril­y nationally. Now, it is easier to join the dots and there is nowhere to hide all of the poor planning and underfundi­ng which has blighted the health system for decades.

This week the junior doctors’ union, the New Zealand Resident Doctors’ Associatio­n, unhappy

HNZ chief executive Margie Apa

Associatio­n of Salaried Medical Specialist­s executive director Sarah Dalton

with a pay offer, gave notice of a 24hour strike on May 7. The associatio­n has raised concerns about the unevenness of the offer, which would give substantia­l pay increases to some of its members but not all.

As we edge closer to the Budget at the end of next month, it shows there is still no shortage of concerning health issues hogging the headlines. It remains to be seen if any rabbits can be pulled out of the Budget hat to change that.

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