Opening of NZ Self Medication Industry Conference
Hon Peter Dunne
Associate Minister of Health
20 October 2016
Opening of New Zealand Self Medication Industry
Conference
Sky City Convention Centre, Auckland
Kia ora tātou, talofa lava and warm greetings to you all.
Firstly, my thanks to Mr Mitch Cuevas and the NZSMI for your invitation to attend your annual conference once again.
I would like to acknowledge Scott Milne, Executive Director of SMI, and all the distinguished guests here today.
It is my pleasure to be able to address you on a few relevant topics to your conference.
As a starting point, as with any government, a top priority for us is improving access to health care and delivering better health services.
In Budget 2016, Health received an
additional $568 million investment for new initiatives,
meeting cost pressures, population growth and demographic
changes.
This year’s investment in health is the
largest increase in Government spending, which takes Vote
Health to over $16 billion for 2016/17.
This means an
additional:
· $400 million to support health and
disability services through district health boards,
· $42.3 million for national disability support services,
· an extra $124 million over four years to increase access to new medicines through Pharmac,
· $24 million for more elective surgery,
· and $23 million towards cost
pressures on services purchased by the Ministry, including
ambulance services and primary care.
While most New
Zealanders enjoy good health and have access to excellent
health care services, looking to the future, we will need to
work differently to meet changing health needs in a way that
is more efficient and achieves the best value for money.
This will require people to take a greater responsibility for their own care and to be more engaged in the decision-making about their health care.
Self-care is becoming increasingly important as further demands are placed on health and social services.
Probably the oldest definition of self-care, which remains often quoted, is that of the World Health Organization, dating back to 1983:
“Self Care in health refers to the activities individuals, families and communities undertake with the intention of enhancing health, preventing disease, limiting illness, and restoring health. These activities are derived from knowledge and skills from the pool of both professional and lay experience. They are undertaken by lay people on their own behalf, either separately or in participative collaboration with professionals”.
I know that not all people may be able to take responsibility for managing their own health care through self-care but for those who are, we stand to make significant improvements for consumers and make wider savings to the New Zealand economy from better use of our health resources, cost savings from targeted use of complementary medicines, and savings in reduced doctor’s visits.
The refreshed New Zealand Health Strategy sets the framework for the health system to address the increasing pressures and significant demands on its services and on the health budget.
As the first refresh of this country’s Health Strategy since 2000, it sets the direction for development over the next 10 years.
The Strategy was the result of extensive engagement with the health sector and the New Zealand population over approximately eight months to develop a picture of what the future might look.
To get to this desired future, the Strategy puts greater emphasis on maintaining health, health literacy and illness prevention to reduce future demands and allow New Zealanders to live well, stay well and get well.
The strategy covers five strategic themes – people-powered, closer to home, value and high performance, one team, and smart systems.
The themes signal a focus on prevention and wellbeing, more integrated services, support for innovation, better collaboration, and ensuring information and services are accessible.
In other words, the Strategy sets out
the framework for participative collaboration between
consumers and professionals to achieve the best possible
outcome for all.
As I have said in the past, I support
the focus on self-care.
I believe that when people are empowered and enabled to take responsibility for their own care, they move from being passive recipients of care to being active participants in their own health outcomes.
But to achieve that fully, people also need to be properly informed about the impacts of the medications they are seeking to use – including both the potential benefits and the possible risks.
After all, self-medication is informed medication.
It is not do-it-yourself medication.
Nor is it just having the right to access any medicinal product one has discovered on the internet, nor is it a substitute for a proper regulatory environment for the approval of such products.
What is important therefore is that our policy and regulatory frameworks operate in a way compatible with a self-medication approach.
One of the most important professional groups, insofar as self-care is concerned, is pharmacy.
Medicines New Zealand, the government’s medicines strategy, which was updated and released in 2015 placed emphasis on the development of a road map for pharmacy
In June this year, the Minister of Health, Hon Dr Jonathan Coleman, launched the Pharmacy Action Plan.
Like the Health Strategy, the Action Plan places a real emphasis on all members of the health care team working more closely together for the benefit of our people to enable people to more actively manage their own health.
Pharmacists play a pivotal role in helping to deliver
faster more convenient health care, particularly in enabling
self-care, and the Action Plan is about putting people at
the centre of what we do in health and across the social
sector.
Internationally, pharmacists are increasingly
providing an extended range of accessible, high-quality,
coordinated services that focus on patient care and
population health.
It is about making the most of
pharmacists’ unique expertise in the safe and effective
use of medicines, and a lot of work has been undertaken over
the last two years to make more effective use of pharmacist
skills.
I am sure you will all be interested to know that the topic of the next International Pharmaceutical Federation (or FIP) reference paper is about pharmacists supporting self-care.
The paper is due to be released next year.
The Pharmacy Action Plan is a
significant milestone and achievement for the sector, and
the engagement with consumers during the development of the
Action Plan generated good insights into the potential
future of pharmacist services and opportunities to expand
the role of pharmacists in our health system.
One of the
key focus areas of the Action Plan – population and
personal health, is targeted towards pharmacists providing
public health interventions that support people to manage
their own health.
You will be interested to know that one
of the points raised by consumers during the extensive
consultation was that people want pharmacists to be more
accessible within the pharmacy, and the Action Plan outlines
ways to strengthen and expand the role of pharmacists.
In
particular, the new role of Pharmacy Accuracy Checking
Technician will free up pharmacists to spend more time with
people to support them to better manage their own
health.
As you know, the Ministry of Health is developing
a new regulatory regime for therapeutic products.
Work to
replace our aged Medicines Act 1981 with a Therapeutic
Products Bill continues and many of you will have been
involved in discussions about aspects of the new regulatory
regime.
The Government is looking for the new Bill to
enable modern regulatory practices and to provide a robust
foundation to services innovation.
The new Bill will
address gaps and inefficiencies in our current regulations
and I am particularly interested in ensuring that the new
Bill supports the continued evolution of pharmacy services
and improved patient care.
I understand that officials will update you on the work and the next steps later today.
From my vantage point, however, the completion of this work and the establishment of a new regulatory framework for therapeutic products is critical to achieving Medicines New Zealand’s objectives of enabling prescribers, dispensers and consumers to move to a more integrated model of care, and re-orienting the medicines sector towards consumer-centred activity.
The Government
will continue to support and provide the infrastructure
needed for self-managed care and new ways of interacting
with the health sector.
The Government has a clear
eHealth vision – that all New Zealanders will have their
personal health information available electronically to them
and their treatment providers, regardless of who they are or
where they are.
eHealth initiatives such as Patient
Portals will assist patients to manage their own care and
take more control of their care.
I hope the message you
take is that the Government is committed to improving the
health of New Zealanders and supports collaboration between
consumers and professionals to achieve the best possible
outcome for all.
Thank you again for your invitation to
speak today, and I wish you all an interesting and enjoyable
conference.
ends