logo
Health Professionals, Medical Bodies & Community Orgs Call For Publication Of Guidelines For Gender Affirming Care

Health Professionals, Medical Bodies & Community Orgs Call For Publication Of Guidelines For Gender Affirming Care

Scoop27-05-2025
Press Release – PATHA
Signatories to the open letter, which include medical bodies, health services, rainbow community organisations & individual practitioners are calling on the government to allow Health NZ | Te Whatu Ora to publish the updated Guidelines for Gender Affirming …
Health professionals, medical bodies, and community organisations have signed an open letter calling for the publication of updated clinical Guidelines for Gender Affirming Healthcare in Aotearoa New Zealand, expressing concern that the publication has been delayed.
Health professionals are asking for updated guidance on providing appropriate and safe healthcare to transgender and non-binary patients.
In 2023 Health NZ | Te Whatu Ora contracted the Professional Association for Transgender Health Aotearoa (PATHA) to update the 2018 guidelines for gender affirming healthcare. It is standard practice for guidelines to be periodically updated to ensure their content is kept up to date. PATHA submitted the updated guidelines in October 2024 and they followed the standard process for publication of a clinical guideline, and were approved by Te Whatu Ora's National Clinical Governance Group.
'It is frustrating for so much work to have been put into the update of these guidelines by so many experts in this field, only to have them held up at this final stage,' says Dr Rona Carroll, PATHA Vice-President. 'The need for this updated guidance is clear and something I hear from health professionals on a daily basis. We just want to be able to publish these guidelines so the clinicians who need them can use them.'
The evidence-based guidelines, which have been peer reviewed by clinicians with expertise in this care from within New Zealand and internationally, cover a wide range of topics relevant to transgender and non-binary health and wellbeing, including new chapters on creating inclusive healthcare environments, non-medical gender affirmation options, and more. The small section within this comprehensive document relating to prescribing puberty blockers aligns with the Ministry of Health's position statement on this care and supports safe prescribing for young people. The guidelines were due for publication at the end of March 2025.
'We're aware that in the days before publication, an FYI was sent to the Minister and Associate Minister of Health,' says Jennifer Shields, PATHA President. 'Less than 24 hours before the date of publication, there was an unnecessary, indefinite and unexplained delay in the publication of these clinical guidelines, we believe due to unprecedented and inappropriate political interference. Delays in releasing these guidelines impacts on the ability to improve healthcare delivery and health outcomes for the transgender and non-binary population.'
Signatories to the open letter, which include medical bodies, health services, rainbow community organisations, and individual practitioners are calling on the government to allow Health NZ | Te Whatu Ora to publish the updated Guidelines for Gender Affirming Healthcare in Aotearoa New Zealand immediately.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Senior doctors' union worried national health plan lacks detail
Senior doctors' union worried national health plan lacks detail

RNZ News

time4 hours ago

  • RNZ News

Senior doctors' union worried national health plan lacks detail

Health Minister Simeon Brown blamed the delay in releasing the plan on the additional audit requirement, which was "imposed by the previous government". Photo: Calvin Samuel / RNZ The lack of detail in the national health plan for how Health NZ will meet its lofty goals, or pay for them, is especially worrying at a time when the public system is under massive pressure, warns the senior doctors' union. Auditor-General John Ryan has found Health NZ's plan - which was released last week, 18 months' overdue - had failed to show how it would deliver public health services , nor how much they would cost. Association of Salaried Medical Specialists principal policy advisor Virginia Mills said the fact there was no roadmap for delivering services, or even an estimate of "unmet need", was a damning indictment on the agency. "Essentially it means he's [the Auditor-General] been unable to vouch for the plan. And that's quite concerning because we've got a health system that's under extreme pressure at the moment, and we're not confident that this plan is going to fix those issues or deliver on better health for New Zealanders," Mills said. Of further concern was the fact that the Pae Ora (Healthy Futures) Bill, currently before Parliament, included a clause scrapping the requirement for the health plan to be scrutinised by the Auditor-General at all, she said. "That would be like if you got a school report to say your child was struggling, and instead of helping your child to do better, you called the teacher and said you didn't want the report anymore," Mills said. "It seems like the Government is saying, 'We didn't like this level of independent scrutiny. Let's get rid of that legislation'." Mills said both those things were at odds with the Government's claim that it wanted greater transparency and accountability. Health NZ blamed the delays in getting out the plan on its "immature" reporting systems, but said they were now bedding in. However, Mills said it was also possible that the focus on cost-cutting (from then Commissioner now board chair Dr Lester Levy's "Reset Plan") had made future planning more difficult. In a written response to RNZ, Health Minister Simeon Brown blamed the delay in releasing the plan on the additional audit requirement for the New Zealand Health Plan, which was "imposed by the previous government". "Removing it aligns Health New Zealand's planning processes with other crown agencies and allows the system to be more focused on delivering timely, quality healthcare care for patients," Brown said. "As part of making the system more efficient and focused on patients, we are also removing bureaucratic processes and aligning Health New Zealand's planning documents with other public sector planning documents." Health NZ would continue to have its annual financial statements and statement of performance audited by the Auditor-General, as required of all Crown entities under the Crown Entities Act. His priority was "to ensure everyone can access timely, quality healthcare whenever they need it, regardless of who they are or where they live", Brown said in a statement. "That's why, for the first time, we are 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." Those targets would be included in the Government Policy Statement on Health, to which the New Zealand Health Plan would give effect. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Nurses to strike for two days in September
Nurses to strike for two days in September

RNZ News

time6 hours ago

  • RNZ News

Nurses to strike for two days in September

Nurses strike July 2025 - North Shore, Auckland. Photo: RNZ/Calvin Samuel Nurses are set to strike again - this time for two days. The union, the Nurses Organisation, says its 36,000 workers have voted to walk off the job for 48 hours from 2 September. The union said Health NZ has failed to address its concerns about understaffing and the government is choosing cost cutting over patients need. Nurses are negotiating their latest contract with Health NZ and have not been able to resolve their differences since their last strike about two weeks ago. Two weeks ago, nurses walked off the job for 24 hours over what they say is Health NZ's refusal to commit to safe staffing levels in their collective agreement. As a result of the strike, Health NZ said an estimated 4300 planned procedures and specialist appointments had to be deferred. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Faster healthcare not the same as 'equitable care' - Auditor-General's report
Faster healthcare not the same as 'equitable care' - Auditor-General's report

RNZ News

time6 hours ago

  • RNZ News

Faster healthcare not the same as 'equitable care' - Auditor-General's report

The issue is that not everyone could be outsourced to private facilities, says the Auditor-General's report. File photo. Photo: 123rf Health NZ needs to explain how the sickest patients will not be left behind in the push to outsource more surgeries to private hospitals, says the government watchdog. At Parliament's health select committee today, the Auditor-General's office tabled its report on equitable access to planned care. Principal auditor Richard Towers told MPs the problem was that not everyone could be outsourced to private facilities - some patients had too many other health problems or "co-morbidities", which meant they were stuck waiting in the public system. "It's not spread evenly across the population. "So Māori and Pacific people in particular, they are they known to have more co-morbidities, which is a risk because if it's not managed and monitored, then you have a population which is disproportionately waiting for care in the public system." National MP Sam Uffindell, who chairs the committee, questioned why that would lead to greater inequity. "Is that taking more pressure off the public system? Why isn't everyone sitting in those waiting lists for shorter periods of time because you've taken people off the list?" Towers said while taking some people off the list could potentially bring down wait times for everyone eventually, some straight-forward patients could leapfrog over others who had waited longer. Furthermore, the ongoing pressure from urgent cases would continue to squeeze those complex patients down the priority list. "There's a risk that they continue to sit on those wait lists because there's no additional capacity in the public system. So there need to be plans around that - what do you do for those people? It's not whether you outsource or not." Assistant Auditor-General Leeanne McAviney said faster care was not the same as "equitable care". "You can end up with a situation where there can be improvements to speed but also exacerbate inequities. All we're saying is there is a risk of that. "Given that Health NZ has obligations under the Act, it needs to monitor speed so it doesn't exacerbate inequities. "Timeliness is a good thing - but need to think about those things [equity] together." It was for Health NZ to explain what it was doing to respond to the Auditor-General's recommendations, she said. Labour MP Ingrid Leary said it was worrying that Health NZ did not have a clear plan to mitigate the risk, nor was it possible to say how big the risk actually was. "If we can't even see what the level of risk is that suggests to me that it's not being taken seriously." Auditor-General's recommendations for Health NZ 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