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Pre-Budget Announcement At Wellington Regional Hospital

Published: Mon 14 May 2012 06:20 PM
Prime Minister Pre-Budget Announcement At Wellington Regional Hospital with Health Minister Tony Ryall
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By Mark P. Williams
Today the Prime Minister gave a pre-budget announcement at Wellington Regional Hospital; he was accompanied by Health Minister Tony Ryall.
He announced a number of new initiatives which came to an investment of $101m over four years which will be largely funded by an increase in prescription charges and other savings within the health sector.
Under the changes, prescription charges would increase from $3 to $5 for the first 20 prescriptions per year; after that they would be free. The Prime Minister emphasised that the level of prescription charges in New Zealand remained one of the lowest among comparable nations; lower than both the United Kingdom and Australia.
The Health Minister spoke of investments in surgery and cancer diagnosis and treatment. The Minister said that the government had increased elective surgery operations by 27,000 extra operations over the last five years and intended to increase this further. He said that he intended to increase availability of cancer treatment including investment in dedicated nurses who would act as first points of contact and case coordinators for cancer patients.
The Minister emphasised that the increase in prescription costs was limited to the first twenty items only, adding that no family need pay more than $40 per year for prescriptions.
Questions on Health
The PM was asked what allowances would be made for beneficiaries; he stated that this was the first increase in
The PM was asked how much of the spending on health would be coming from cuts in other departments and other areas
The PM and Health Minister were asked about the legal implications on recent legal judgments on payments for family members acting as carers for disabled or aged relatives
The Minister was asked if the increased prescription charges constituted a cut to frontline medical services—both the minister and PM emphatically rejected this
General Questions
The PM was asked questions about similar changes to education and other areas
The PM was asked about whether he would support gay marriage; he said that it was not his number one issue and reiterated that he considered economic issues to be larger priorities but indicated that he was not personally opposed to gay marriage.
The PM was asked why he was making changes to labour laws; he said that it was the fulfilment of policies the National Party had campaigned on: including allowing partial reductions for partial strikes, and removing the 30 day rule that forces non-union members to take union terms and conditions—the only new change was in the period of time allowed for unions or employers to initiate collective bargaining.
The PM was then asked whether he felt it was likely that New Zealand would be going into recession, he said that nothing he had seen indicated that this was the case
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ENDS
Mark P. Williams
Political Journalist and Independent Academic Researcher
Journalist and independent academic researcher with primary interests in politics and literature.
As a researcher I am a contributor to various academic publications, including Alluvium journal of 21st century literature, The Literary London Journal, The Irish Journal of Gothic and Horror Studies, and Critical Engagements: Journal of the UK Network for Modern Fiction Studies (UKNMFS).
As a journalist, I have worked as Parliamentary reporter for Scoop Independent Media and International editor for the Scoop Review of Books.
Contact Mark P. Williams
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