3-4 minutes
Senior medical specialists want a makeover of a major review of the country's health system.
Photo: 123rf
The Health and Disability System Review was due out in March but the pandemic has held that up.
The Medical Association earlier this week
called for its immediate release.
But the Association of Salaried Medical Specialists executive director Sarah Dalton says the opposite.
"It would be ill-considered to put it out now without paying
attention to the things that it (the pandemic) has thrown up," Dalton
said.
"Plus, we would like to see the things we've learnt particularly
around public health capacity and the importance of prevention and
preparedness, being taken into account before we do anything with the
review.
"Experts, citing the Global Health Security Index, have come out this
week saying New Zealand was ill-prepared for a pandemic, and ... the
Prime Minister rightly agreed that we need to rebuild our health system
and particularly the investment in public health."
That was even more important given the review chaired by Heather Simpson was meant to be "big picture", Dalton said.
*See all RNZ coverage of Covid-19
Its terms of reference also prevented it looking into health funding,
so the review was only ever going to be a partial response and needed
revisiting, she added.
The Simpson review was due out alongside the government's first-ever national stocktake of public health assets.
The stocktake was
partially released to RNZ in March.
Finalisation of the stocktake's second part has been held up by diversion of resources to the pandemic response.
The stocktake is the first step towards a national asset management
plan for spending billions of dollars over the next decade to upgrade or
replace the country's many old, cramped and sometimes dangerous
hospital buildings.
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