Population Based Funding - A Two Faced Beast
Tuesday, 3 July 2001, 1:15 pm
Column: Selwyn Manning - Scoop Auckland
by Selwyn Manning
The argument has been raging for years:
it all boils down to two options.
Should population based
health funding be founded on principles of health status and
need, or one of divvying out the health dollar by pure
headcount.
If this country was
egalitarian to the point of common socio-economic status,
then consideration may be warranted to the later option -
but we all know that this country is not egalitarian. Far
from it.
Health status is not an
elusive banner-brand that sits perfectly abstract within
Ministry of Health reports in Wellington. It represents real
life.
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Counties Manukau District Health Board
chief executive, David Clarke [pictured right], is
correct to publicly state that southern Auckland’s health
status will get worse unless the Ministry of Health speeds
up changes to the money allocated for health boards.
As the New Zealand Herald
reported, the ministry has yet to set the final formula to
allocate money.
Here in Auckland, in pockets of our
suburbia, we know all too well what health status means. We
see a lot of it. Its diversity is something that sends us
reeling. It affects everyone - whether it be our own child
coughing uncontrollably in our arms, or the child next to
you in the supermarket checkout in bare feet with streaming
nose, ears, eyes, and worrying spots on his or her
skin.
Today
statistics have been
released that chronicle
three years of research into southern Auckland’s health
profile. It comes as no surprise that it’s not a healthy
document.
What
it contains is a reminder to Wellington, to the Ministry, to
the Minister of Health Annette King [pictured
left], that Population Based Funding is a two-faced
beast. It will caress and crush political
longevity.
If
this coalition Government has an Achilles Heel, it is this.
The problem existed under past governments. And the current
coalition Government’s parties were largely critical of past
failures. This Government has the social justice mandate to
correct it once and for all. It must do
so.
Essentially,
basing an area’s funding on a mere headcount is destined to
fail. Here in southern Auckland we parade and pride
ourselves on a diverse ethnic and racial mix: “The microcosm
of New Zealand” one Labour MP is often heard to
herald.
But
within the diversity is a complexity of varying health
status determined directly from one’s ethnic makeup and
socio-economic status.
Put
simply, if you are white pakeha, your health on average is
much better than if you are not white pakeha. If you are
Maori, your health status is worse than your pakeha
counterpart. And, if you are Pacific Islands, particularly
if you are a child, then your health status is deemed very
very poor indeed.
This
means Maori and Pacific Islands people use hospitals more
often, because they generally suffer ill-health more often
than white pakeha.
Population based
funding designed around a $1 for $1 formulae, by design,
avoids the fiscal cost of meeting health need in large
population urban areas - especially so where ethnic, racial,
and socio-economic mix is
diverse.
Granted,
formulae have part-way addressed a percentage top-up for the
proportion of Maori living within our communities. But it
must also meet the health status needs of the Pacific
Islands community. To fail to address this core problem, is
to fail in healthcare delivery to all peoples. And it
displays indifference and disregard for the social-justice
ideals that the parties of this coalition Government
campaigned on.
Acute
healthcare needs of Maori and Pacific Islands people mean
hospitals like southern Auckland’s Middlemore Hospital [the largest trauma
hospital in Australasia] see far more acute admissions
each year - on a population basis - than other large
hospitals around New Zealand.
In
essence this means large pockets of voters in Labour
electorates are being denied access to a public health
system that they expect, deserve, voted for, and
need.
A
failing formulae blocks elderly from accessing elective
surgical procedures - as acute costs drain resources from
elective surgical coffers.
A
failing formula forces middle-income people to drive into
private healthcare arrangements, because, due to lack of
access, the public health system is no longer an
option.
A
failing formulae adds to a widened ditch of haves and
have-nots, to all the jealousies, bigotries, ignorance and
racial slurs that surface from alienated and disenfranchised
communities.
Where
high populations of white Pakeha live - the number of acute
admissions are fewer. However, within those communities,
differentials exist too. Often in the dicey elective surgery
area. For example, the higher the percentage of elderly
pakeha that live within a community, the lower its elective
health status, etc etc..
Population based
funding is the calculation. The differential top up to the
formulae ought to be determined by a community’s cumulated
health status. Now that, would be a policy that would
deliver.
In
southern Auckland, year after year, record numbers of
largely Maori and Pacific Islands children are acutely
admitted suffering varying strains of influenza, meningitis,
rheumatic fever, measles, mumps, malnutrition, and general
woeful poor health. The reasons are many, and in many ways
are being addressed by correcting government policy. Causes
are being addressed - this is commendable and honourable.
Housing, education, law and order have benefited much from
recent policy reform.
And
in health? Well, in health, it is right to address primary
healthcare - we all know it has needed attention for
decades. But it would be wrong to mask this population based
funding issue in the shroud of improvement service claims -
as the past National led government attempted. It would also
be wrong of this current coalition Government to bask in
primary healthcare improvements - to do so would be a
shallow attempt to divert public attention away from the
obvious.
Back
to the purpose of this article.
At
Middlemore Hospital, the wards clog up, especially in
winter. This “Winter Crisis” has become well documented,
predicted, expected. Not tolerated. The Ministry is well
versed in this phenomenon. It’s predecessors: the Health
Funding Authority, the Northern Regional Health Funding
Authority all shrank back into the greyness of Wellington’s
paper-weight to avoid advancing policy that this area of New
Zealand has long deserved.
This coalition Government must address
the negative diversities that exist in our communities. If
“Closing the Gaps” is to be buried in essence as well as in
word, then let’s be honest about
it.
The differentials in health
status must be acknowledged publicly and calculated in the
country’s health funding
formulae.
A fix-it
population based funding formulae must be inputted into the
fiscal equation - it must place a calculation-top-up
determined by each community’s deemed health status. This
would take into account the cluster effect of cumulative
community, ethnic, racial health status. This differential
must be on top of the dollar for dollar per head of
population that surrounds the status que.
The
consequences of not doing do will be neglect of the worst
kind - and an election issue served up to opposition parties
on a tin-plate-platter. The realisation would bite - this
issue is a two-faced beast indeed.
See also
earlier Scoop articles on Population Based Funding
Formulae:
Scoop: No Prime Minister: The Buck Stops
With YouScoop: Survey Confirms Scoop Social Decline
Investigation
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