New initiatives to tackle workforce shortages
Health Minister Andrew Little has announced a raft of changes to ease the ‘‘extreme’’ pressure on the system and make it easier for healthcare workers to get into the country in a package with upfront costs of $14.4 million.
However, the College of Nurses has warned against using immigration as a remedy for workforce shortages amid unprecedented global demand driven up by the pandemic.
The Government will fast track and cover $10,000 of an overseas nurse’s registration cost, as well as other healthcare worker training and national and international recruitment drives, and a new dedicated immigration support service to make it easier for workers to move to New Zealand.
But in a slightly less conventional announcement, Little also outlined a collaboration with the popular TV medical show, Shortland Street.
While the Government won’t be funding the show, the soap’s producers will have access to government information to help it build a storyline that promotes nursing as a career.
Little spoke about the workforce as the health system grates under relentless Covid-19 and winter illness pressures. As many as 3300 nursing roles were vacant around the country.
‘‘The pressures that healthcare workers are under as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic, the worst flu season in living memory, and unprecedented staff absenteeism largely as a result of the first two factors ... have been extreme over the last two weeks,’’ he said in the Beehive yesterday.
‘‘But we have to acknowledge the problems go back before that. The system has been under resourced for a long time.’’
Many of the measures have been previously announced or signalled.
But Little said the system overhaul, and the creation of Health New Zealand, allowed the Government to move further and faster to implement these programmes and initiatives.
However, the College of Nurses has warned easing immigration is not the solution to the workforce shortages.
‘‘As an affluent country we have no right to take health professionals from countries whose need is equally and perhaps even more serious’’, executive director Professor Jenny Carryer said.
Little said the number of nurse practitioners – nurses with advanced training who can practise beyond the level of a registered nurse – trained each year would double from 50 to 100, but Carryer said this should be expanded further, especially to ease pressures in primary care.
Dr Jeff Lowe, chair of General Practice NZ, said more and more practices were closing their books to new patients.
‘‘We are reaping what we have sown over the years, which is a lack of investment in our GP workforce – both financially and planning-wise,’’ he said. ‘‘The announcement today is good in so far as it is an acknowledgement of the crisis however it doesn’t go far enough.’’
However, Little again refused to refer to the workforce issues as a ‘‘crisis’’.
‘‘The current health workforce shortages have been decades in the making, but have been exacerbated by Covid-19.’’