logo
#

Latest news with #DrRachelleLove

Medical Council fears political interference over doctor shortage
Medical Council fears political interference over doctor shortage

RNZ News

time07-05-2025

  • Health
  • RNZ News

Medical Council fears political interference over doctor shortage

Photo: RNZ Politicians should not be allowed to decide who can practise as a doctor in New Zealand in the current shake-up of health workforce regulations, the Medical Council has warned. Consultation on updating health workforce regulations has just closed. Health Minister Simeon Brown has said the current system was overly bureaucratic, and he wanted to streamline overseas recruitment while maintaining clinical standards. However, Medical Council chair Dr Rachelle Love told Nine to Noon red tape was not stopping overseas trained doctors getting registered in New Zealand. About 44 percent of doctors in New Zealand were overseas-trained, and each year, about 70 percent of new registrations were for international medical graduates, and fewer than 1 percent of international applicants were declined registration. "Where the concern is, is the retention of those doctors. So the international medical graduates who come to New Zealand, by year one, 40 percent have left. By year two, 60 percent of internationally medical trained doctors have left New Zealand." Love, a Christchurch head and neck surgeon, said the focus needed to be on why these doctors were "not thriving" in the New Zealand health system, and what support they needed to integrate and stay. "It's not about getting doctors in the front door." The Medical Council, which oversees clinical standards and cultural competency for doctors, was supportive of the idea of modernising the regulatory system, Love said. There was room for more collaboration and even consolidation. "We agree with many of the tenets in this document. We think it's important to prioritise patient voices, it's important to drive efficiencies and streamlining regulation is important. "The document is an opportunity to ensure the regulatory system is working, and it's aligned to the needs to patients, communities, practitioners and the wider health system." However, any overhauled workforce regulations had to ensure they matched the "risk profile" of the professions. For instance, ensuring doctors were fit to practise was "high stake". "Too far is when the public is affected. The public need to be safe in any decisions that are made. The groups also need to have independence, they can't have political independence, they need to stand aside from the politics of the day. And clinical input is really important." The Health Ministry's proposal includes the set up of a tribunal to allow individuals to challenge decisions made by the regulatory bodies without having to go to court. Love said the council was open to having a tribunal as it was confident in the integrity of its processes - but its fear was that this would "not be an independent body, that in fact politicians would be determining who would become a doctor in New Zealand". Doctors and other health professionals had also been taken by surprise by the signalled intention to remove proving "cultural competency" from requirements to practise in New Zealand, Love said. "In health care in general, we're a little surprised that cultural safety has become a political issue. "Cultural safety is fundamentally about listening to patients and centring them in their healthcare. And it's not a new concept. Hippocrates - 2500 years ago - talked about the importance of listening to patients, hearing their account of their symptoms, how they made sense of their own health, and then looking at factors like their family history and environmental conditions in their health." Cultural safety was integral to effective clinical care and the evidence showed it led to improved health outcomes for all patients, not just for Māori, she said. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Medical Council concerns over increased political control vs clinical independence in the workforce
Medical Council concerns over increased political control vs clinical independence in the workforce

RNZ News

time07-05-2025

  • Health
  • RNZ News

Medical Council concerns over increased political control vs clinical independence in the workforce

Photo: Supplied / Medical Council Consultation on updating health workforce regulations has just closed, but it has sparked worries in the profession, including over greater political influence at the expense of clinical independence. The government has talked about modernising the system, streamlining overseas recruitment while maintaining clinical standards, reducing red tape and more focus on putting patients first. The Health Minister Simeon Brown has said the way the health workforce is regulated is overly bureaucratic affecting patient access and the cost of healthcare. But the Medical Council, which sets standards of clinical and cultural competence, says the real problem is the retention of doctors and has expressed concern that collapsing the number of health profession regulators could see increasing political control. Kathryn is joined by the Chair of the Medical Council, Dr Rachelle Love, who is a Christchurch head and neck surgeon.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store