Well Child Obligations Target Families for “Surveillance”
Well Child Obligations Target Families for “Surveillance”
April 5, 2013
Palmerston
North, NZ – Minister for Social Development Paula
Bennett’s Social Security Bill passed its second reading
on Wednesday, 20 March, by a narrow one-vote margin and will
soon progress to a third reading vote. The Bill’s
“social obligations”, which will remove beneficiary
parents’ right to make decisions for their children’s
health and education, came under scrutiny from Greens MP
Metiria Turei during the Second Reading Debate. According to
Ms Turei, Minister for Health Tony Ryall has warned that the
social obligations will put the health of children at risk,
but his concerns have been ignored by Paula
Bennett.
“This Minister knows that children will
suffer as a result of this bill,” said Ms Turei during her
speech. “They know that fewer children will access health
care. They know that fewer children will get
medicine.”
Under the Bill, Well Child/Tamariki Ora
checks will be compulsory for children of beneficiaries. The
Ministry of Health objected to the social obligations in the
Bill, saying, “There are risks to the Well Child programme
if the checks are seen as a punishment or a sanction. One of
the valuable traits of Well Child has been that it is
non-threatening with a high degree of public and family
acceptability.”
Ms Turai also quoted Health Minister
Tony Ryall saying that the social obligations for Well Child
checks would case “substantial negative impacts on
families and to vulnerable children, including risks of
increased maltreatment and neglect.”
“We also
expect that beneficiaries sanctioned under the Bill will be
more likely to defer health care and present at emergency
departments,” Mr Ryall said.
Ms Turei says that the
Bill’s social obligations seek to use the Well Child
checks to run “surveillance” on beneficiary families.
“In July 2012 the Ministry of Health asked the Ministry of
Social Development to amend the wording of a paper that was
going to Cabinet. The Ministry of Health said, ‘Please
remove the word “surveillance”. The Well Child programme
is not designed or intended as a mechanism for surveillance
of beneficiary families or indeed any
families.’”
“This shows what the intention of
Paula Bennett was then, and is still now,” said Ms
Turei.
When asked about these concerns during debate,
Ms Bennett’s answer was revealing. “We think it is
incredibly damaging not to have your child enrolled for Well
Child checks…It is actually incredibly damaging not to
have them immunised.”
“This is horrendous,” says
Barbara Smith of the Home Education Foundation. “It just
confirms what so many parents in New Zealand have been
afraid of—that these compulsory health checks will be used
to enforce Paula Bennett’s 95% immunisation
goal.
“They will be used to carry out surveillance
on families. They will be used to promote treatments like
immunisation, which is a parent’s
choice.
“Responsible parents don’t want to be
spied on. They don’t want to be pressured by government
agencies into treatments they believe are
harmful.
“They want to make their own informed
decisions.”
Metiria Turei says, “That is what the
Government is removing from parents: the right to decide for
themselves what is in the best interests of their
child.”
Mrs Smith encourages concerned New
Zealanders to write, call, and ring their MPs before the
Bill’s Third Reading within the next week or
two.
“The Bill passed its Second Reading by only one
vote, 61-60,” she says.
“We particularly need to
contact the Honourable Members for Epsom and Ohariu, John
Banks and
Peter Dunne, who have the option of changing their votes.
“We only need one more vote to make
history.”
ends