logo
Putting Patients First: Government To Refocus Health System On Outcomes

Putting Patients First: Government To Refocus Health System On Outcomes

Scoop14-06-2025

Minister of Health
The Government will introduce legislation to ensure the health system is more accountable, more efficient, and focused on delivering better outcomes for patients, Health Minister Simeon Brown says.
'After years of bureaucracy and confusion, the health system lost its focus. The previous government scrapped health targets, centralised decision-making with no accountability, while every single health target went backwards meaning patients waiting longer for the care they need,' Mr Brown says.
'This Government is focused on delivery – getting the basics right, fixing what the previous Government broke, and ensuring New Zealanders have access to timely, quality healthcare.'
Cabinet has approved a suite of amendments to the Pae Ora (Healthy Futures) Act 2022, designed to strengthen the performance of Health New Zealand and ensure a clearer, more accountable system.
'These changes are about improving health outcomes by making sure the system is focused on delivery, not bogged down in doing the same thing twice. That means better care for patients through a more connected, transparent, and effective health system,' Mr Brown says.
'The previous Government's reforms created a bloated system where no one was truly accountable for delivery. We're changing that,' Mr Brown says.
'We're putting health targets into law so every part of the system is focused on delivering faster care, shorter wait times, higher immunisation rates, and real results.'
The current legislation is too focused on bureaucracy rather than patients, with multiple charters and plans creating confusion and fragmentation. These reforms repeal the health sector principles and health charter – cutting needless bureaucracy – while requiring each population strategy to give effect to the Government's health targets.
Mr Brown says infrastructure delivery was one of the most serious failings under the previous Government.
'Too many builds were delayed, blown out, or never even started. We're addressing this by establishing a dedicated infrastructure committee and embedding infrastructure as a core function of Health New Zealand. This means the board can focus on lifting system performance where it matters most: for patients.'
The Minister is also confirming changes to strengthen the Hauora Māori Advisory Committee (HMAC) and clarify the role of iwi-Māori Partnership Boards (IMPBs).
'Local IMPBs will continue to engage with their communities but will now provide advice directly to HMAC. That advice will then support decisions made by the Minister and the Health NZ board.
'These changes are about one thing – putting patients back at the centre. We're rebuilding a health system that delivers real outcomes, not just organisational charts.'
The Amendment Bill will be introduced to Parliament in the coming weeks.
Notes:
Key changes include:
Establishing a new statutory purpose to ensure all patients have access to timely, quality healthcare.
Legislated health targets to lock in accountability and ensure New Zealand's health system is measured and managed.
Requiring all health strategies give effect to these targets.
Stronger governance and financial oversight within Health New Zealand.
Making the delivery of health infrastructure a core legislated function of Health New Zealand.
Establishing a permanent infrastructure committee to carry out functions related delivery of physical health infrastructure by Health New Zealand.
The Director-General of Health (or delegate) able to attend Health New Zealand board meetings to support monitoring.
Ensuring simplified board appointment rules that select the best person for the job, based on skills and delivery.
Clarifying public service integrity rules apply to the Health New Zealand board, CEO, and staff so patients know they're held to the highest standards.
Removing audit requirements for the NZ Health Plan, aligning with other Crown entity requirements.
Repealing the Health Charter and Sector Principles to reduce red tape and make things clearer for everyone.
Enhancing the role of the Hauora Māori Advisory Committee (HMAC) to provide advice to the Minister and the board of Health New Zealand, that will be taken into account at the national level.
Clarifying and streamlining iwi-Māori Partnership Boards (IMPBs). IMPBs focus will shift away from local service design and delivery, to engaging with communities on local perspectives and Māori health outcomes.
This legislation supports the Government's wider Health Delivery Plan – including reinstated health targets, a record $16.68 billion in funding, faster access to primary care, improved infrastructure delivery, and the recruitment and training of more frontline doctors and nurses.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Media in the middle of political skirmishes over sickness and health
Media in the middle of political skirmishes over sickness and health

RNZ News

timean hour ago

  • RNZ News

Media in the middle of political skirmishes over sickness and health

Last weekend's Sunday Star Times digs into the political battleground of healthcare. Photo: Sunday Star Times Mediawatch : This week the latest Ipsos Issues Monitor survey showed 'inflation/cost of living' was - again - the top concern of Kiwis. No surprise there - or that 'healthcare/hospitals' was in second place. "It continues on its upward trend, reaching its highest level of concern (43 percent) since tracking began," Ipsos said. That - and the fact that more of those surveyed chose Labour as the party most capable of managing health - would have stood out for the government. The same is true of how the issue plays out in the media. Under the headline The political problem of health Health Minister Simeon Brown told the Sunday Star-Times last weekend the job "matters to every New Zealander from the moment they're born to the moment they die. It's a huge responsibility, but there's also significant opportunity." He'd just announced an opportunity for private hospitals - instructing Health NZ to make long-term deals with them for elective surgeries. "We haven't been ideological about it, we've been focusing on pragmatic solutions to ... maximise what's delivered both in the public and private system," Brown told Newstalk ZB the same day. The next day, New Zealand Herald political editor Thomas Coughlan reported official papers showed Treasury reckoned further cuts to health would be needed to meet the demands of the government's health delivery plan. But that didn't come up when the prime minister appeared that day on Newstalk ZB for his regular Monday morning chat. The host Mike Hosking said he couldn't agree more when the PM said people don't care who's doing their long awaited op when they are staring at the hospital ceiling. But then Hosking told the prime minister about an interview last week with a Christchurch surgeon who works in both the public and the private systems. "We need to be more flexible in public (hospitals). They even come round at one o'clock and say it looks like you'll finish after 4 or 4.30, so we won't let you do your second case," Chris Wakeman told Hosking last week. "You wouldn't close your factory at 4 o'clock if you still had work to do," he added. Later, Mike Hosking read out a text from an unnamed listener who claimed nurses and anaesthetic technicians insist operating stops early if it looks like it's going to go past 4pm. The following day Mike Hosking asked Brown if surgeries that might overrun 4pm were routinely postponed. "Look, there are heavily unionised contractual arrangements in the public system and so you do end up with inefficiencies throughout the system. Those issues need to be dealt with by Health New Zealand to make sure that it is more efficient," Brown replied. "These union agreements ... drive inefficiency and a lack of productivity. These are issues that do need to be resolved as part of (Health New Zealand) negotiations with the unions." Health Minister Simeon Brown Photo: RNZ / REECE BAKER "Absolutely not. The limits are more about management decisions on staffing costs, availability of recovery beds and how to distribute operating theatres between acute and elective work," Sarah Dalton, executive director of the Association of Salaried Medical Specialists told Mediawatch . "The barrier to providing more elective surgeries is a refusal to pay staff required to work longer hours ... and inability to provide sufficient staff to run our operating theatres to their maximum capacity." "We don't have anything in place that would stand in the way of doctors opting to work in a different work pattern or longer hours. And in fact, many of them frequently do. "Typically surgeons and anaesthetists work 10 hour days. A number of hospitals sometimes run what are sometimes called twilight theatres in the early evening or on weekends. "I don't think the way that the discussion has been presented is entirely fair - and it is somewhat misleading. "It is concerning to us that 'private' is seen as the answer when in fact they are already near capacity for what they can do. And we also have significant doctor shortages." Sarah Dalton Photo: LDR / Stuff / Kevin Stent Hosking [ returned to the issue] with Health NZ's Chief Clinical Officer Dr Richard Sullivan on Thursday. He said the proportion of "early finishes" in theatres doing elective surgery is declining - and under the government's 'elective boost' programme they had been doing some surgeries on Saturdays and Sundays too. "It's more than just the unions. You'd need a quite a big workforce to run full Saturday lists all the time. That's not to say we shouldn't look at that, but we need the most efficient way of getting people through our theatres," Dr Sullivan said. Hosking told his listeners the bottom line in public hospitals was: "If it's 4:30, we're going home." There's a bit more to it than that. While there is some extra capacity in theatres, many more people would have to be paid for more hours to do more out-of-business-hours. They don't have all the staff to do a lot more of elective surgeries, in either public or private hospitals And as the Herald' s Thomas Coughlan reported earlier this week, Treasury reckoned the Health Delivery Plan targets could mean increased spending cut targets in the year ahead. Health workforce pay increases would be limited to a degree described as "unprecedented," Treasury documents also stated. In the Herald , Brown rejected Treasury's conclusions. He said government provided Health NZ additional funding in three successive Budgets and Treasury had not consulted the Ministry of Health or Health NZ before reaching its conclusions. "Why do we still have 10 days' sick leave?" Hosking also asked the PM last Monday. He said the question had been put to him by "my tech guy" working at his house. The tech guy got a headline-making response on that from the nation's leader. "So we had five sick days until Jacinda [Ardern] decided we needed ten for Covid. Can we agree that it's gone-ish - and therefore we might need to do something about sick leave?" Hosking asked. "We might need to do things about pro rata and sick leave as well, because you know, people who are on part time contracts are getting full-time 10-day equivalency. Brook Van Velden is working through some of those issues," Luxon replied. The possibility of that went straight into Newstalk ZB's news bulletins. When the prime minister did his turn on RNZ's Morning Report soon after that, he was asked if he would support a cut in sick leave. "Well, I think there's probably a need for us to look at it ... and just make sure that we've got that setting right," he replied. ZB's political editor Jason Walls was puzzled. "Sick leave is an entitlement that everybody has. So it's not just some beltway story. It is an interesting thing for the Prime Minister to bring up. It was just Mike's mate that was talking about it." But Mike's mates behind the mic at Newstalk ZB were teed up to talk about sick leave all day. "A very strong hint that 10 days of sick leave might be going the way of the dodo," was Kerre Woodham's take when she followed the Mike Hosking Breakfast . "I get that it's a godsend if you are prone to infections during winter, but really spare a thought for the employers." Employers such as perhaps Nick Mills, a hospo guy in the capital who's also the host of Wellington Mornings on Newstalk ZB. "I go with the flow. But I'm in an industry where people take the absolute mickey," Mills told his listeners in the capital. "They're just teasing it a bit at the moment on the fact that it's going to be for only part- time employees, but that's going to change," he said. One hour later they were hearing more on this on ZB in Canterbury from the local host, John MacDonald. When Matt Heath and Tyler Adams took the ZB mic for the full national ZB network at noon, they had a similar sense of what was common sense. "10 days a year? Does the average person walking around need 10 sick days a year? I don't think so," Heath said. The questions for the workplace relations minister Brooke van Velden followed. On ThreeNews and Checkpoint she batted back questions about whether it was a gender issue. She was also taken aback that this was a talking point at all. "The only reason we're talking about this is because Mike Hosking was talking about it this morning. There was nothing from the government side to say we had an announcement to make," she told ThreeNews . In the end it will be months before all this is fully aired in Parliament, long after Mike Hosking's tech guy first put it on the agenda. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Hawke's Bay runner Nicole Pendreigh plans marathon for 115 women killed on runs
Hawke's Bay runner Nicole Pendreigh plans marathon for 115 women killed on runs

NZ Herald

time7 hours ago

  • NZ Herald

Hawke's Bay runner Nicole Pendreigh plans marathon for 115 women killed on runs

'Running has become a source of strength and healing for me. But for many women, it's also a source of fear,' she told the Herald. This race is a challenge she was once told she would never be able to do after a serious hip injury meant she could only run 30 seconds at a time. Nicole Pendreigh, a 23-year-old runner from Hawke's Bay, plans to finish a marathon in Taupō on August 2. Photo / Supplied From injury to marathon-ready In 2022, Pendreigh fractured her hip and suffered a labral tear, leading to years of pain after her injury was initially misdiagnosed as a groin strain. 'I didn't get any scans done. I was kind of doing the wrong sort of rehab for it, which led to an impingement,' she said. 'There was extra bone growth on my femur, which causes my bones to rub together on my hip.' Her hip capsule was inflamed and had become thickened. 'I tried to get cortisone injections for it because I couldn't sit for over an hour. 'I couldn't walk uphill or downhill. I couldn't sit on the ground without pain.' Pendreigh said she was told to give up running and look for another hobby because it was 'just something I'll have to deal with now'. At the beginning, she was only able to run for short distances and could only manage 30-second blocks. After years of rehab, Pendreigh has built up her body's tolerance for running. 'I think later on it might give me a bit of grief, but it's definitely worth it for the [marathon] day.' 'Constantly getting scared' Pendreigh said the run will be about more than just crossing the finish line. 'It's about honouring the lives of women lost and working toward a future where every woman can run freely and safely.' Pendreigh said because of her schedule and the winter season she is forced to run at night or early morning in the dark. 'I'm constantly getting scared from my own shadow ... and people or males coming towards me.' She told the Herald she was on a daytime beach run when an incident with a man occurred that sparked her desire for change. 'I was running, and he thought it was a fun time to just yell at me, and he started running after me, which was super scary,' she said. 'It got me thinking about how unsafe women feel when running and how normal it is for me to feel like that on a run. 'I wanted to make it not normal.' Women assaulted and killed on runs Pendreigh said she will be dedicating her marathon to 115 women killed on runs worldwide, including murdered Kiwi runners Jo Pert and Margaret-Lynne Baxter. The young athlete will be wearing a custom top with all 115 names. 'I'll bring all of them across the line. I've got all 115 names on the back of my top and two of them are New Zealanders as well.' Nicole Pendreigh plans to tackle a marathon event wearing a top bearing the names of 115 women killed on runs worldwide. Photo / Supplied Wellington resident Margaret-Lynne Baxter was run down, abducted, raped and murdered near the Hastings suburb of Flaxmere during a Sunday morning run in 2001. In 2016, mother-of-two Jo Pert died after being attacked while out jogging in Remuera, Auckland. 'I really want to have them along with me in the journey,' Pendreigh said. 'Just knowing that they were trying to do something for enjoyment and got their lives taken because of it.' Sign up to The Daily H, a free newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store