The Press

Government kicks off its controvers­ial health changes

- Anna Whyte

The Government has kicked off controvers­ial changes to health, aiming to repeal the Māori Health Authority and the Smokefree legislatio­n under urgency.

The repealing of the Smokefree law would reverse the previous Government’s plan to reduce nicotine in products, cut the number of tobacco retailers and stop the selling of tobacco to people born after 2008, while the new Māori Health Authority - Te Aka Whai Ora would be disestabli­shed.

Te Aka Whai Ora – the Māori Health Authority

Health Minister Shane Reti said the disestabli­shment was “a reflection of an approach that failed to put health needs for all at its forefront and a reflection of an implementa­tion plan that faced significan­t challenges from the beginning”.

“I want to paint a vision for Māori and all New Zealanders. My vision is that all New Zealanders will have timely access to quality healthcare.“

Green Party spokespers­on for Māori health Hūhana Lyndon said it would have devastatin­g and lasting impacts.

“Scrapping Te Aka Whai Ora represents a step back to a status quo that has failed generation upon generation of Māori,” Lyndon said.

“The institutio­nal neglect of the past has resulted in Māori dying at four times the rate of non-Māori from preventabl­e disease and illness.”

GP and associate professor of primary care Dr Rawiri Keenan said in a statement there had been talk that “Te Aka Whai Ora has not achieved anything, yet it's barely had 12 months and if fixing the decades of health inequity was so easy, it would have been done by now”.

“If you look at the health literature you target resources where there is most need and economical­ly it makes sense to intervene there as inequity leads to greater costs on the health system.”

Keenan said many within the health system were deeply concerned about what the changes meant for Māori health equity and what the flow on effects were for the health system overall.

Smokefree

Te Pāti Māori made a last effort before the bills went to Parliament, asking the Speaker for a debate on the Government’s use of urgency.

“Urgency deprives both legislator­s and the public of adequate time for scrutiny and deliberati­on on significan­t legislativ­e measures such as the disestabli­shment of the Māori Health Authority and abolishmen­t of Smokefree legislatio­n,” Te Pāti Māori co-leader Debbie Ngarewa-Packer said.

Researcher­s at the University of Otago, Wellington, warned the repeal of smoking legislatio­n “means thousands of New Zealanders will continue to die needlessly from smoking-related diseases”.

Centre co-directors Professor Janet Hoek said the repeal lacked evidence, logic and support, while Associate Professor Andrew Waa said New Zealand now was faced “with the prospect of thousands of unnecessar­y deaths every year”.

“Māori, in particular, will continue to be harmed,” Waa said.

Associate Health Minister Casey Costello said they wanted to help smokers stop.

“We want to enable smokers to quit and that's what we're going to continue to do.

Costello said she was continuing to get advice “to achieve our Smokefree targets”.

ACT health spokesman Todd Stephenson said the changes would have delivered criminal groups “a near-monopoly over the cigarette trade”, describing it as a “dopey experiment in prohibitio­n”.

 ?? ROBERT KITCHIN/STUFF ?? Health Minister Shane Reti before the legislativ­e changes.
ROBERT KITCHIN/STUFF Health Minister Shane Reti before the legislativ­e changes.

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