INDEPENDENT NEWS

HCH Asks If Active Review Is Passive Parking

Published: Wed 6 Jul 2005 09:13 AM
Tuesday 5 July 2005
HCH Asks If Active Review Is Passive Parking
“HCHs’ monthly meeting unanimously rejected the current ‘active review system’ for elective surgery and termed it passive parking,” Eleanor Carter Spokesperson of Health Cuts Hurt said today.
She was commenting on the Government’s “active review” system where thousands of patients who currently do not cross the bar for elective surgery are supposedly provided with a programme of “active care and review”.
“These patients have been told that although they need elective surgery, publicly funded treatment is not available to people with their level of need at that time, and that they will be placed on active review. Patients in active review are supposed to have their plan of care, including their level of priority, reviewed and updated at intervals of not more than six months,” said Eleanor Carter.
“GPs and specialists involved in the system mockingly term it ‘passive parking’,” said Eleanor Carter. “It is a national scandal that what occurs for most patients is that their condition will meet the access threshold for treatment in the foreseeable future, because their health condition deteriorates over the period!”
“With a $7b surplus the Government should be urgently reducing the waiting lists,” said Eleanor Carter. “Instead of buying into a tax reduction debate, other Parties should be pushing to get the thousands of patients off the passive parking list.”
ENDS

Next in Lifestyle

Local Playwright Casts A Spell Over Hamilton
By: Melanie Allison
New $12M Wellness & Diagnostic Centre Opens In Hamilton ‘Disrupting The Historic Continuum’ For Māori
By: Te Kohao Health
Fresh NZ-grown Vegetables Now Even Better Value For Cash Strapped Kiwis
By: Vegetables New Zealand
Supporting The Next Generation To Succeed In Agriculture And Horticulture
By: AgriFutures
New Crops, Conversations And Illuminations: Asian Aotearoa Arts 2024 Full Programme Announcement
By: Asian Aotearoa Arts
Accessing The Benefits Of Music Therapy
By: Arts Access Aotearoa
View as: DESKTOP | MOBILE © Scoop Media