Rural health group calls for urgent meeting with government
October 24, 2017
The national rural health group is calling for urgent meetings with the incoming health and primary industries ministers
to help solve the serious rural health crisis.
Michelle Thompson, chief executive of the Rural Health Alliance of Aotearoa New Zealand (RHAANZ), says they need to work
with the two new cabinet ministers to identify rural health issues and come up with solutions.
She says RHAANZ has top priorities and solutions already articulated in its rural health road map, which is its 10 to
15-year plan for growing healthy rural communities in New Zealand.
“We look forward to working with the new government, in particular the new health minister and new primary industries
minister,” Thompson says.
“We are especially keen to pick up discussions on Labour’s election promise to address core inequities of access to
health services for rural people and NZ First’s election pledges to develop a national rural and provincial health
services plan and to increase health research and development funding to two percent of GDP over 10 years.
“All three coalition parties have expressed a strong commitment to improving mental health and wellbeing services,
reviewing primary care funding and the national travel assistance scheme, addressing rural health workforce issues as
well as an increased focus on resilience and prevention.
“This aligns well with the framework for rural mental health developed by RHAANZ and some of the early work we have done
towards suicide prevention and we look forward to synergies with these policy commitments.
“This new government has the opportunity to appoint a rural health commissioner. Australia appointed their first ever
rural health commissioner, Professor Paul Worley, at the weekend. This is a milestone event, an election promise on
which they delivered. The commissioner will provide independent advice to government on rural health for the betterment
of Australia.
“We are eager to set up an urgent meeting with government about introducing a similar role in New Zealand to help them
deliver on their promise of improving access to health services for rural New Zealanders.
“The government needs to help remove barriers so rural people’s health is considered just as important as those who live
in cities,” she says.
There are more than 600,000 people living in rural New Zealand, equivalent of easily being the country’s second largest
city. Agriculture and tourism are the powerhouses of the Kiwi economy.
Every year, more than two and a half million tourists visit rural New Zealand. In 2011-2012, $53 billion, or 25 percent
of GDP, was generated directly or indirectly by the agri-food sector, from rural New Zealand.
ends