Government Splashing Billions On New Dunedin Hospital; Preventative Healthcare Would Cost A Fraction
The Government has committed $1.88 billion to build a new Dunedin hospital, while doing little to address the underlying issues of healthcare in Aotearoa New Zealand.
On Friday, Minister of Health Simeon Brown signed the contract with Australian construction company CPB.
General Practitioners
Aotearoa (GPA) chair Dr Buzz Burrell says that’s a waste
of taxpayer money.
“It’s like buying a really
expensive, bulky, gold-trimmed cart when you’ve only got
one geriatric donkey to pull it,” he
says.
“Hospitals are crowd-pleasers because we want
reassurance that they’ll be there when we get really
ill.
“The problem is the Government has severely
under-funded the donkey, that’s us GPs. So there will be
more really ill people every year and this hospital’s beds
will be full well before its completion in the
2030s.”
Increasing access to general practitioners is proven to improve health across the population and decrease the load on hospitals.(1 2 3)
According to the RNZCGP 2024 Workforce Survey(4), 50% of GPs are planning to retire in the next 10 years.
There is no viable plan to replace them.
“Honestly, stocking up our GP workforce would cost a fraction of the nearly $2 billion that’s going into that hospital,” Burrell says, “and it would do a lot more to keep New Zealanders healthy.”
GPA estimates that paying an additional 500 full-time-equivalent GPs, 500 practice nurses, rooms, equipment and continuing education would cost less than $400 million per year.
“If we work on the
well-established formula that ‘a dollar spent in general
practice saves $10 down the track’, the savings made from
this investment would pay for several Dunedin hospitals,”
Burrell says.
“So who is advising the government on
budgeting health expenses here?”
GPA recommends that the government take action to slow the GP retirement, attract new doctors into the GP workforce, and attract more GPs from overseas.
“If they want their shiny
hospital, so be it,” Burrell says. “But they’d better
fix up the GP situation first.”
GPA also supports
hospital doctors going on strike with the Association of
Salaried Medical Specialists (ASMS).
“We need to
break the cycle,” Burrell says. “Hospital doctors are
being asked to pick up what we can’t do, but ironically
cannot because they are already overwhelmed thanks to the GP
shortage.”
References:
1
Ministry of Social Development: Prevalence
and Consequences of Barriers to seeing a GP for
children
2 Dr Prabani Wood, The New Zealand
Initiative: The
Heart of Healthcare: Renewing New Zealand's Primary Care
System
3 Royal Australian College of General
Practitioners: Preventable
hospitalisations soar in GPs’ absence: AIHW
4 Royal
New Zealand College of General Practitioners: 2024
Workforce
Survey
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