Weekend Herald

Pharmac board backs CEO after apology

Fitt gave ‘verbal explanatio­n’ for emails ridiculing broadcaste­r

- Nicholas Jones

Pharmac’s board has accepted an apology and “verbal explanatio­n” by chief executive Sarah Fitt, following her involvemen­t in internal emails about broadcaste­r Rachel Smalley.

Board chair Steve Maharey yesterday said the board had endorsed an “action plan” proposed by Fitt and other leaders to improve the organisati­on’s culture, including by hiring “an external party to assist the senior leadership team and the board”.

“The chief executive expressed her regret over the comments. The board has accepted her apology and verbal explanatio­n. It has requested that the chief executive offer a public apology,” Maharey said.

Smalley told the Weekend Herald she was appalled by the response, which “calls into serious question the capability and competency of Pharmac’s board”.

“Is this the best Steve Maharey can do? His solution is to agree to spend more taxpayer dollars commission­ing an external agency to teach Pharmac how to be nice?”

Smalley questioned how Public Service Commission­er Peter Hughes could be satisfied with the response outlined yesterday, and said she felt most sorry for those reliant on the agency for medicine and medical devices.

“This tells them nothing will change at Pharmac except they’ll be commission­ing external consultant­s to improve their public image. Patients need pills, not PR. How is this good public sector governance?”

The Herald revealed earlier this month that Fitt wrote several emails, including regular messages to her communicat­ions team about Smalley, who has strongly advocated for more drug funding, including through an organisati­on she founded, The Medicine Gap.

One of the communicat­ions team told Fitt in an email that Smalley was an activist not a journalist, to which Fitt responded: “Yep agree, the good thing is that she has a terrible time slot [on Today FM] and not much of a following”.

Another senior staff member described a “nauseating” Smalley interview on her radio show, while another said she’s “gunna be out of a job” with the closure of Today FM. A third Pharmac staff member said Smalley would be “mega shitty” about not getting an interview with their CEO, while a fourth worker wrote a limerick about the broadcaste­r.

The communicat­ions were revealed after Smalley lodged a Privacy Act request.

Various patient advocates and groups have called for Fitt to resign over the emails.

However, she survived yesterday’s regular meeting of Pharmac’s board. In a media release, Pharmac said a number of actions would be taken, immediatel­y or in the next three months.

Those include strengthen­ing the induction for all staff and advisers “to ensure a stronger focus on responsibi­lities as public servants”.

Pharmac has also pledged to improve how it interacts with patients, advocates and others, and increase what informatio­n in the public interest is proactivel­y released.

Training will also be done on “the machinery of government”, including the Privacy Act, Official Informatio­n Act and Code of Conduct.

“The board will be provided with regular updates on the implementa­tion of the action plan, and closely monitor progress,” Maharey said.

In a statement, Fitt apologised for the comments made in the emails, and said her action plan was to “ensure we do not see a repeat of this”.

“As the chief executive, I am ultimately responsibl­e for leading and setting the tone for the organisati­on. I did not meet this expectatio­n and deeply regret my actions.

“I am confident that what we have agreed today will lead to a better culture and a better Pharmac.”

Minutes from yesterday’s meeting show the board asked Fitt to make a public apology.

Fitt was appointed in January 2018. She was previously the agency’s director of operations, and chief pharmacist at Auckland Hospital.

Prime Minister Chris Hipkins has said “the comments made by the chief executive of Pharmac are totally unacceptab­le”, but were a matter for the board.

Pharmac is the national medicinebu­ying agency, and independen­tly decides what drugs to fund from money allocated by the Government.

Its board is appointed by the Health Minister. It is chaired by Maharey, a former Labour Government Cabinet Minister and the former Vice-Chancellor of Massey University.

Other members include Dr Peter Bramley, Talia Tiori Anderson-Town, Dr Anthony Jordan, Dr Diana Siew, and Dr Margaret Wilsher.

Is this the best Steve Maharey can do? His solution is to agree to spend more taxpayer dollars.

Rachel Smalley

 ?? ?? Pharmac CEO Sarah Fitt apologised to the board for comments made in the internal emails.
Pharmac CEO Sarah Fitt apologised to the board for comments made in the internal emails.
 ?? ?? Rachel Smalley said she was appalled at the Pharmac board’s response.
Rachel Smalley said she was appalled at the Pharmac board’s response.

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