Too Many DHBs Irresponsible And Negative
MEDIA STATEMENT FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE,
WEDNESDAY 8 MARCH
2006
“Too Many DHBs Irresponsible And Negative Over Professional Guidelines For Senior Doctors”
“Too many district health boards are being irresponsible and negative over the importance of allowing senior doctors to meet professional guidelines,” said Mr Ian Powell, Executive Director of the Association of Salaried Medical Specialists, today. Mr Powell was referring to a comparative league table of the attitude of the 21 DHBs prepared by the Association (attached).
“It is recognised in our national DHB collective agreement that the professional guideline for time for non-clinical duties such as peer review, clinical audit, teaching and other professional and administrative duties should be a minimum of 30% of their total hours of work (excluding after hours call duties and leadership roles).”
“This league table provides the clearest indication of how committed or not DHBs are to supporting ongoing quality improvement for senior doctors and whether they are two-faced about it or not.” DHBs who perform poorly on the league table are more likely to view senior doctors as production workers and to devalue the importance of professional standards and guidelines which are critical to quality improvement and standards of patient care.”
“On the positive side 10 DHBs are graded between A- and B. On the negative side 5 DHBs are D+ or worse including an E and an F. The remainder are in-between.”
“Several DHBs will have to pull their socks up if they are to be genuinely committed to quality improvement and high standards of patient care,” concluded Mr Powell.
Ian Powell
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
DHB League table: Non-Clinical
Duties
GRADE DHB COMMENTS
A- Northland Already had
strong commitment to 30% minimum in local collective
agreement prior to MECA.
B+ Waikato
Bay of Plenty
Taranaki
Whanganui
Wairarapa
Hutt Valley Has
adopted a positive attitude consistent with the ASMS’s
approach including an agreed process for implementation.
[Waikato will have a new chief executive and chief operating
officer next year and it will be important that this doesn’t
disrupt progress].
B Lakes Initially negative comments
from lower level management but Chief Executive and senior
management have recently affirmed a positive approach
consistent with the ASMS’s. An implementation process has
also been agreed.
B MidCentral Positive promising
approach consistent with ASMS’s although yet to confirm
implementation process
B West Coast Owing to recent
change In chief executive, the opportunity to engage over
this issue has been recent. But the signs are encouraging
with this DHB expressing an approach consistent with the
ASMS’s. There has been insufficient opportunity to agree
upon an implementation process
B- Waitemata First DHB to
make a commitment in a collective agreement (set 30% minimum
as a medium term objective in 2001; medium term is now up).
But there are unfortunately some managerial pressures to
renege on this commitment
B- Tairawhiti
South
Canterbury Implementation is being pursued incrementally but
no indication at any disagreement with the ASMS
approach
C Southland Position unclear due to high level
of internal instability but no outward negativity
expressed
C Nelson Marlborough Struggling to understand
why professional standards need to be made explicit and why
there are advantages in an agreed implementation process.
But it has accepted the importance of recognising time for
non-clinical duties and is not demonstrating negativity or
hostility
C- Canterbury In the past, prior to the MECA,
has taken a positive approach with the 30% minimum
implemented in a number of departments. More recently other
attitudes emerging from negative hostility and a narrow
contractualist misrepresentation of its obligations under
the MECA (employment relations section) to flakiness and
uncertainty. Hopefully this DHB’s new Chief Executive will
provide much needed positive leadership
D+ Counties
Manukau Position unclear but negativity and confusing
messages coming from some managerial personnel. Chief
Executive known to respect importance of quality improvement
and professional standards; it is important that he asserts
leadership
D Auckland Too blinded by deficit challenges
to grasp importance of the issue. Needs to move out of
crisis management mode and look ahead
D Capital and
Coast Ducking for cover by claiming that this is a national
issue; utter nonsense and procrastination. But we are
edging closer towards an agreed implementation
process
E Otago Has adapted a negative attitude, quite
hostile from its human resources section, based on a failure
to appreciate the importance of meeting professional
standards and a narrow contractual misrepresentation of its
obligations under the MECA. The fact that it has
nevertheless come close to agreeing upon an implementation
process with ASMS mean that it is rated 20th rather than
21st.
F Hawkes Bay Although camouflaged in ‘warm and
fuzzy’ rhetoric, this DHB has also displayed a thoroughly
negative attitude which includes a narrow contractualist
misrepresentation of its obligations under the
MECA