logo
The Panel with Deborah Hart and Anton Mathews Part 2

The Panel with Deborah Hart and Anton Mathews Part 2

RNZ News2 days ago
This half hour the panel speaks to Otago University Public Health professor Nick Wilson about a study showing that many former leaders of the world's nuclear-armed nations were impaired by health conditions while in office. After that, they head to Oamaru, the Victorian capital of New Zealand, where a passionate group of volunteers run a clothing hire service.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Lifting advertising restrictions will enable medical conferences in NZ
Lifting advertising restrictions will enable medical conferences in NZ

RNZ News

time4 hours ago

  • RNZ News

Lifting advertising restrictions will enable medical conferences in NZ

David Seymour says two of Australasia's largest medical conferences will come to New Zealand next year. Photo: RNZ / Mark Papalii Associate Health Minister David Seymour says medical conferences can happen in New Zealand now, because the government is lifting advertising restrictions on medicines. Two of Australasia's largest medical conferences will come to New Zealand next year, and the government is talking up estimates they could add $5 million to the local economy. Seymour said the advertising restrictions were brought in because of fears pharmaceutical companies could try to skirt approvals processes, but his Regulations Ministry found that approach was out of step with other countries. He said advertising medicines at a conference was one of the main reasons to hold one. "We have got rid of the restriction on advertising new medicines, so there's good reasons for doctors to come to New Zealand and learn about them. Before we made this change, New Zealand doctors would go to places like Fiji for a medical conference, which is nice for them, but bad for the New Zealand economy, because the money's going over there," Seymour said. The 2026 conferences are for the Australian and New Zealand College of Anaesthetists (ANZCA) and the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Ophthalmologists (RANZCO), and could attract an estimated 3300 delegates. "You're going to see a whole lot of mainly doctors but medical professionals interested in learning about new medicines and technologies and that they're going to join together in New Zealand, and it's going to just be a wonderful thing," Seymour said. "It's the kind of activity we should want in this country. You know, I've long said New Zealand should try to be the ancient Athens of the modern world, the centre of medical science and excellence." Seymour in a statement said the government was committed to removing red tape, and the lifting of restrictions would make it easier for health professionals to keep up with the latest products and medicines. "New Zealand's current health regulations can be overly bureaucratic, and this is slowing down access to care, increasing costs, and making it harder for patients to get the services they need." Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Plea to reopen consultation into plans to close Auckland mental health facility
Plea to reopen consultation into plans to close Auckland mental health facility

RNZ News

time6 hours ago

  • RNZ News

Plea to reopen consultation into plans to close Auckland mental health facility

There are plans to close mental health facility Rauaroha Segar House. Photo: Google Maps Street View A union representing public service workers is urging health officials to reopen consultation into proposals to close an Auckland mental health facility , citing concerns about predetermination. The PSA has sent a lawyer's letter to Health NZ Te Whatu Ora with the plea about Rauaroha Segar House, which offer a publicly funded intensive programme for people with long-standing or chronic mental health problems. Health NZ says it is working through feedback on the proposed closure, after staff put forward a plan to keep a service they and many patients say is unique. After the period seeking submissions closed, correspondence obtained by Labour spokesperson for mental health Ingrid Leary and reported by RNZ revealed officials had intended to vacate the Khyber Pass Road facility Segar House operates from in January, before a pre-Christmas move to extend the lease until June. It has since been extended again until 30 September. The correspondence makes no mention of possible alternative venues for the programme, but Health NZ said the building lease was not a factor in its decision making, and the proposal was about providing the best healthcare and value for money. The PSA's letter, from its solicitor Caroline Mayston to Health NZ co-director of mental health and addiction services in Te Toka Tumai, Stacy Silva Garay, last Friday said after learning of the lease information in the media the union had serious concerns about "predetermination of the change process". It said Health NZ breached its duty to provide all relevant information to employees and unions during the Segar House consultation process. "We request that consultation be reopened to allow affected employees to consider and respond to this additional information, as is their right," Mayston wrote. The union's concerns were not alleviated by Health NZ saying lease arrangements had nothing to do with the proposal to close Segar House. "This [the correspondence obtained by Leary] indicates to us that Te Whatu Ora was planning for the disestablishment of Rauaroha Segar House well prior to opening consultation with affected employees and had no intention of maintaining the service elsewhere. "We do not accept this information was not relevant to the change process." Rauaroha Segar House has offered a publicly funded intensive programme for people with long-standing or chronic mental health problems. Photo: 123RF RNZ asked Health NZ if it would allow staff and other parties to have a say on the new information, what its response was regarding concerns about predetermination, and when a decision on Segar House's future would be made. Health NZ northern regional acting deputy chief executive Mike Shepherd said officials were considering the information the PSA provided. "We have received a large volume of feedback on the change process for the facility and we have been carefully reviewing this feedback. "We will be in a position to make a decision shortly and this decision will be communicated to affected stakeholders as soon as possible." Leary said allowing the PSA's suggestion of reopening consultation seemed fair and logical. "Extending the time to ensure proper consultation is happening is the right thing to do. That's what I've said all along and that's what needs to happen." It made sense to give the staff idea of loosening the criteria for people to use the service a go, to see if it worked, she said. But, it looked like officials hadn't entered the process with an open mind as they scrambled to save money, Leary said. Health NZ has cited low referral numbers in its proposal to axe Segar House, although entry requirements were tightened about six years ago. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Central Otago Lakes patients forced to travel for hospital treatments
Central Otago Lakes patients forced to travel for hospital treatments

RNZ News

time14 hours ago

  • RNZ News

Central Otago Lakes patients forced to travel for hospital treatments

Southern Lakes Health Trust clinical advisor Dr Jez Leftley, health infrastructure specialist Helen Foot and Southland MP Joseph Mooney are among those pushing for a new publicly-run, privately-funded hospital in the region. Photo: SUPPLIED Decades of dramatically misjudged healthcare demand is forcing thousands to travel beyond Central Otago and Queenstown Lakes for hospital treatment each year, including for half of all births, a health group says. The Southern Lakes Health Trust, whose steering committee includes Otago and Central Lakes MPs, mayors and clinicians believed a recent shift in approach from Health NZ could result in a new, local, publicly run and privately financed hospital. The trust wanted public health chiefs to back its plan, acknowledging existing healthcare services were long outstripped by the region's booming growth. The trust's clinical advisor Dr Jez Leftley said Queenstown's Lakes District Hospital was built in 1988 for 4500 people, so its 12 inpatient beds and 10 emergency department beds were not enough for the nearly 80,000 people living in Central Otago and Queenstown Lakes. "There's been a recognition amongst clinicians in the area for years the services are severely lacking and we're hugely under-resourced." More than 3000 Central Otago Lakes patients were admitted to Dunedin and Invercargill hospitals last year because of limited local services, the trust said. The trust said 49 percent of planned births in Queenstown Lakes and Central Otago happened outside of the region, not including urgent transfers. About 300 people were transferred from Lakes District Hospital to other hospitals by helicopter in 2024 at a cost of $6.3 million, including visitors injured skiing, biking and taking part in Queenstown's adventure tourism offerings, according to figures supplied by Southland MP Joseph Mooney. Mooney - also on the steering committee - said that could have flow on effects for people in other regions waiting for elective surgeries. "They get, effectively, bounced off the waiting list because of the urgent needs that are coming in from people who have bad injuries. So, it can mean people end up waiting a lot longer for health services in other parts of the broader southern region." Earlier this year the Southern Lakes Health Trust devised a plan to try to fix the region's healthcare woes. The trust wanted Health NZ and the government to consider a new, privately financed, but publicly run "Southern Lakes Hospital". Health infrastructure specialist Helen Foot said it was an outside-the-box solution to an urgent need. "It's partly about getting creative in how you use your workforce and using them in ways where we're not stealing off the public sector to then pay more in the private. "A lot of these private projects are being looked at anyway. People are talking about two potential private hospitals in Wānaka. The whole point of our project is to ensure that those are done in a co-ordinated way that doesn't affect the public system, and actually helps the public system." One of those hospitals was a $300 million, five level, 70-bed hospital proposed by property investor, Roa. The $300 million, five level, 70-bed hospital proposed by property investor, Roa. Photo: Supplied / Roa It said last year it would be seeking fast track consent for the build, east of Wānaka. Leftley said the trust was not talking about a "true" public-private partnership where it would be contracting private services, rather solely hospital infrastructure. Foot said Health NZ was too busy "in the throes of delivering health services" to investigate the opportunities for partnership. "It's not really on them to be doing the connecting and bringing parties to the table. So we decided that's work we could help with." Asked if it would consider a privately owned, publicly-run hospital for the region, Health NZ said it would not make any decisions until the completion of its clinical services planning. In July Health NZ announced it would work on a clinical services plan for the Queenstown Lakes and Central Otago districts. Health NZ said it would study the region's current and projected health needs and report back by December. "This planning will help to determine what future publicly funded clinical services may be required in the area and how they will be delivered across the continuum of care," it said. Leftley said the plan was a long-awaited step forward because Health NZ had recognised Queenstown Lakes and Central Otago's needs separately to those of wider Otago and Southland. "We've needed them to be looking at the planning for the 14 years that I've been here, and they've always just been pushing it off, pushing it off, so to have made that step forward now, to actually committing to looking at this region and looking at what healthcare services we need in this region is huge," he said. Foot said the clinical services plan stopped short of a solution but might help to realise the group's vision. "Our leadership group will be looking at funding and resourcing the plan so that we can get this, keep the momentum going, get this moving," she said. Mooney said the discussion seemed to be shifting from "if" there should be a new hospital to "where and when". Foot said the health struggles of "ordinary New Zealanders" in Central Otago and Queenstown Lakes region had long been overlooked. "There's often a lot of comparisons around whether there's deprivation here, whether the community are deserving of health services being close to home - and we do have access to health services - but they're at such distance that it's causing real hardship. "A couple of forums I've been in, clinicians have described the conditions here as 'Third World' in some areas." She said decision-makers had not acknowledged the rapid population growth of Queenstown Lakes and Central Otago districts, instead relying on whole-of-New Zealand population projections. "The data being relied on was woefully inadequate, frankly," Foot said. She noted Health NZ's 10-year health infrastructure plan released in April did not mention any plans for Queenstown Lakes or Central Otago beyond committing to a new rural health hub in the wider "southern" region. Leftley said waiting a decade before planning a new public hospital could be catastrophic. "If we look at what the population of the Southern Lakes region would be at that stage - we would just fall over. It would be dangerous. There would definitely be some deaths related to not having the facilities in the region," he said. The trust said it was waiting for direct feedback from Health Minister Simeon Brown about the hospital plan and would seek an assurance he would investigate solutions. In a statement, Brown said ensuring health services kept up with population increases in the Queenstown Lakes and Central Otago districts was a priority for him. "Earlier this year at the NZ infrastructure investment summit, I made clear that the government was open to all funding and financing proposals that will help us catch up on the infrastructure backlog," he said. "I look forward to receiving Health New Zealand's clinical services plan for the Queenstown Lakes and Central Otago once it's completed and reading through its recommendations." Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily 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