The New Zealand Herald

$100 million shortfall on cards for DHB

- Lucy Bennett

Canterbury District Health Board is closing in on a $100 million projected deficit for the current financial year. The $98.4m estimated deficit is 50 per cent higher than the DHB’s $63.9m figure for the 2017/18 financial year.

It also follows the revelation last week that Counties Manukau DHB is also heading for a larger than expected deficit for the 2018/19 year. It has a projected deficit of $53.4m. It ended 2017/18 on $19.8m.

Canterbury District Health Board chairman John Wood and the DHB’s leadership team appeared before the health select committee at Parliament yesterday to be questioned on its annual plan for the 2018/19 year.

The Herald reported on Tuesday that just 12 of the country’s 20 DHBs have had their annual plans signed off, with only four months of the financial year left.

Wood and chief executive David Meates confirmed to the committee that Canterbury’s annual plan had gone to Health Minister David Clark only a week ago, after “many iterations” in which they were asked to review it and look for more savings.

Meates said there were several reasons for the size of the deficit, including the “ongoing disconnect between share of population and share of funding, which has been a challenge for . . . the last five years”.

Wood was also critical of population projection­s, saying the December 2013 figures were 41,000 people lower than what eventuated.

Population projection­s are important because they are used to determine the share of funding each DHB receives. The Ministry of Health has confirmed it will use 2013 Census figures for new projection­s because of issues with last year’s Census.

Canterbury had undergone rapid population growth following the earthquake­s, Wood said, which had “put services under pressure and meant our damaged physical infrastruc­ture is inadequate”.

The scale of the combined deficit for all DHBs is not known because monthly financial performanc­e data has not been publicly released since the end of the 2017/18 financial year.

At that time, the combined deficit of the DHBs had blown out to $240m, double what it was the previous year.

National’s health spokesman, Michael Woodhouse, has estimated it could double again to $500m by the end of the 2018/19 year.

A Ministry of Health report on the DHBs’ financial performanc­e in the first four months of the 2018/19 financial year was enough to prompt a warning from Clark to DHBs that they need to tighten their belts or risk more governance or board changes.

In Budget 2018, health received an extra $2.2 billion over four years and another $100m to help cover deficits.

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