Rural Health Alliance deserves funds injection - Feds
Rural Health Alliance deserves funds injection - Feds
The Government should not switch off life support
for what has been an effective voice for the health of rural
New Zealanders, Federated Farmers President Katie Milne
says.
Rural Health Alliance Aotearoa New Zealand will find out on Thursday whether the Government has approved its case for funding of $600,000 so that it can continue its work.
"The Rural Health Alliance is essentially a district health board for rural Kiwis," Katie says. "It advocates for the 600,000 New Zealanders living in rural areas - that’s one and a half times the population of our second largest urban area, Wellington."
Core funding for the operating, leadership, advocacy and needs identification work of the Alliance has for the last five years been met by member organisations, most of them charities and membership-levy groups which are themselves finding money is very tight. The Alliance has said that model is no longer sustainable without government support.
The Alliance identifies and
helps address gaps in health services in hinterland areas.
Just one example has been its work - with other agencies -
to upskill rural health and social service professionals in
suicide prevention strategies, and run campaigns aimed at
boosting the mental wellbeing of farmers and their families
put under stress by drought, debt and other circumstances.
It has a contract with the Ministry of Health in mental
health service provision but every dollar is specified for
deliverables, with no funding for base costs.
Katie, who
is a member of the Rural Health Alliance executive, says
gaps in health services in rural New Zealand are "becoming
more and more apparent".
"If the Alliance is starved of funding and is forced to close, those gaps and shortfalls could snowball, leaving the health and wellbeing of rural residents at significant risk.
"Australia and the USA have
had rural health umbrella groups for decades, with
government funding for their running costs from day one. New
Zealand deserves the
same."
ENDS