The Government is backing a proposal for the biggest reforms to healthcare in a generation, which includes culling the number of District Health Boards around the country and dropping elections for their members.Good. Because the current system - where DHBs are elected but have no power or independence - is just a scam designed to prevent accountability. When people complain about health funding, the Minister - who makes all the decisions and decides what gets funded where - gets to point the finger at the DHB and say "their fault", while the DHB can do the same right back. The result of this mutual blame-shift is left as an exercise for your next visit to your local hospital. A return to appointed membership will make it clear that they are servants and functionaries and that the real decisions are made by the Minister who appoints them - and that that Minister is the one who should be held accountable for failures of resourcing. So I expect the way this will go is that the government will adopt all the plans - greater centralisation, fewer DHBs - but keep the pointless elections, because Ministers love having a permanent blame sink.
Two years in the making, a review team of experts - led by health economist and former Helen Clark confidant Heather Simpson - has proposed a complete overhaul of the health system.
Among the review’s main recommendations are:
- A new health authority, Health NZ, to take control of the health system.
- A reduction in the number of district health boards, from 20 to between 8 and 12, in the next five years.
- Ending elections for DHB members and making them all Government-appointed.
- A Māori health authority to sit alongside Health NZ and the Ministry of Health.
Tuesday, June 16, 2020
Ending the DHB scam?
The government has announced the results of its review of the health system, and it looks like a thorough shake-up: