Hastings Leader

To¯ tara clinics to stay free for teens

Not all GP services can self-fund care for young people

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The To¯ tara Health clinics will continue to supply free healthcare to children aged 14 to 17 after the Hawke’s Bay District Health Board pulled its district-wide funding.

In October last year, general practition­ers across the region were told subsidised free GP services for 14-17-year-olds would finish on March 31 this year.

To¯tara Health general manager Shane Gorst said there is no free service for rangatahi except that funded by individual practices like Totara between April 1 and July 1.

The Hastings and Flaxmere GP service has been self-funding free service for this demographi­c since 2015.

“Well before the DHB decided to introduce this funding across the region,” said Gorst.

To¯ tara Health provides free access to these services because it believes its patients need support. “Removing the cost barrier is one crucial and simple way that they can support our community by improving access to care,” Gorst said.

“We sustained these services before their support, and we will continue to sustain them regardless of whether the DHB reviews its decision, because our community need us to provide this support for them,” he said.

“The need hasn’t changed, nor have the reasons that the GP started funding this in the first place.”

Our wha¯ nau are under more pressure than ever before, so introducin­g a cost barrier now goes against what we are trying to achieve.

Shane Gorst To¯ tara Health general manager

Not all Hawke’s Bay GP services have the ability to self-fund care for their young teens.

Gorst said general practices are left to decide, based on their individual circumstan­ces, whether they can afford to self-fund the service and carry the consequenc­es of the DHB’s actions.

Hawke’s Bay DHB revealed it plans to replace the old service with a new service, with a collective of Ma¯ori providers, and that the new service would be for all rangatahi.

Many are worried that even with a new service in place, the more than 22,000 rangatahi aged 10 — 24 living in Hawke’s Bay will not be able to receive help.

The new service to be delivered by the collective — for all 10- to 24-year-olds in Hawke’s Bay — was based on a model of care outlined in a document named “Hauora Rangatahi”, released in December 2019.

The Hauora Rangatahi document calls specifical­ly for a kaupapa Maori service to be developed.

Gorst said that of the five providers making up the new collective “Kahui Waiora”, the only one employing general practition­ers is Hauora Heretaunga.

Hauora Heretaunga is based out of Te Taiwhenua o Heretaunga and is advertisin­g that “high demand means

that enrolments at Hauora Heretaunga are subject to availabili­ty”.

Gorst asked how the collective will be able to provide what the DHB has publicly stated they are going to provide, from July 1, for more than 22,000 young people.

The Hawke’s Bay DHB executive director planning funding and performanc­e, Emma Foster, said the HBDHB acknowledg­es some confusion surroundin­g the new rangatahi service.

She also said there had been “insufficie­nt” communicat­ion to some stakeholde­rs around the replacemen­t service.

As a part of the DHB’s new service, Foster said the intent is that the rangatahi service will also offer a standard co-payment to reduce and, in some cases, eliminate the barrier of cost to access general practice services.

More informatio­n on how general practice can access the rangatahi

service will follow in the next few weeks.

To¯ tara Health GM Gorst said: “Our wha¯nau are under more pressure than ever before, so introducin­g a cost barrier now goes against what we are trying to achieve.

“Everyone is struggling with the stress and uncertaint­y of the pandemic, the cost of living and other challenges. The impact on the community will be that many young people who could previously access free care through their GP will no longer be able to do so.

“In many cases, this will mean they receive no care at all or that the care they do receive will be disconnect­ed from the clinicians they have come to know and trust over years of relationsh­ip building,” Gorst said.

“Decisions such as this one by the Hawke’s Bay DHB have a significan­t impact on general practice and inevitably on some of the services we can provide to your family.”

 ?? Photos / Warren Buckland ?? Both Hastings and Flaxmere To¯ tara Health GP clinics will self-fund and continue free health care for their 14 to 17-year-olds.
Photos / Warren Buckland Both Hastings and Flaxmere To¯ tara Health GP clinics will self-fund and continue free health care for their 14 to 17-year-olds.
 ?? ?? To¯ tara Health continues to fund teen care, saying introducin­g a cost barrier goes against what they are trying to achieve.
To¯ tara Health continues to fund teen care, saying introducin­g a cost barrier goes against what they are trying to achieve.

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