Health Minister Dr David Clark interviewed by Corin Dann
Health Minister Dr David Clark interviewed by Corin Dann
Health Minister appoints Crown Monitor
at troubled Counties Manukau DHB.
Health Minister Dr David Clark told TVNZ 1’s Q+A programme that Crown Monitor, Ken Whelan will oversee the Counties Manukau District Health Board as it manages a number of difficult issues.
“..they’ve got deficits blowing out.
We’ve seen the building issues. We need to have assurance
that that’s on track to address the issues.
CORIN So what are we
supposed to read into that? You don’t have confidence in
them to an extent you have to put in one of your people on
the board?
DAVID
I want to be really clear that we need to
rejuvenate that board. And I make no apology for that. If we
have the same people doing the same things, we’re going to
get the same results.”
David Clark also named three new DHB chairs for Auckland, Waitemata and Counties Manukau. They are: Pat Snedden, Judy McGregor and Mark Gosche.
When asked whether he would look at changing the DHB model, Minister Clark told Corin Dann, ‘I won’t promise significant change this term, but I want to make sure that we have the best model in place to deliver healthcare at the best price for New Zealanders.’
And when questioned about whether the Budget would deliver on promises to bring GP visits down by $10 on average, Minister Clark said, ‘We’re going to have to phase some of these initiatives. There’s no doubt about that.’
The Health Minister also told Q+A,
‘international evidence suggests that private-public
partnerships in health don’t work out as people plan them.
You end up paying a lot more over time for the same
assets..
CORIN
So it is ideology, fair to say?
DAVID No, not ideology. I'm talking about evidence.’
Please find the full transcript attached. Here are the links to Part 1 and Part 2 of that interview.
Q +
A
Episode
DAVID
CLARK
Interviewed by CORIN
DANN
CORIN It is an interesting
question because money is a big problem for health. You
never have enough. Why not use the private sector, for
example, in Dunedin hospital, where you’ve ruled it out,
where the last Government was, to save yourself some
money?
DAVID Well,
international evidence suggests that private-public
partnerships in health don’t work out as people plan them.
You end up paying a lot more over time for the same assets
and often lack the flexibility because, of course, a private
business is going to want to cover off risk, and no one
knows what the future in health is going to look like.
CORIN So it is
ideology, fair to say?
DAVID No, not
ideology. I'm talking about evidence. Certainly in London,
you ask the mayor, Sadiq Khan there, he describes the
hospitals that are privately funded there as a noose around
the ratepayers of London’s
necks.
CORIN But I
guess the point I’m making is that there is a line
you’ve drawn between roads and hospitals. You’re saying
it doesn’t
work?
DAVID Roads
are more
predictable.
CORIN The
problem is Treasury’s identified $14 billion worth of
hospitals that are going to have to be built over the next
10 years, fix ups, all that sort of stuff, over the next 10
years. But from what I can see, Grant Robertson’s saying
he’s got 10 billion that the Government would contribute,
so where does the other 4 billion come from that you’re
going to need? Because you can’t borrow any more.
DAVID Yeah, under
the status quo, it comes off the balance sheets of the DHBs.
Remember, they still carry that value on their balance
sheets. It is a long way out. We’re talking over the next
10 years. But there’s no doubt we’ve got a plan for
these things, and that’s the reason why I asked for a
national asset management plan for our health system.
CORIN So it could
be more, couldn’t
it?
DAVID Of
course it could be more. We don’t know
yet.
CORIN But
where is the plan to have the money? Because you’ve only
got so much capital available. There’s other things that
want it. You’ve got light rail and all sorts of other
things trying to get capital. How are you going to have
enough? It just doesn’t stack up, does
it?
DAVID Yeah, the
Government’s put aside in the HYEFU $42 billion for
capital projects across a range of areas. And the capital
allowance for this coming budget will be bigger than we’ve
seen for some time. This Government is prepared to tackle
those challenges. We will spend more, but we’ve got to
make sure every dollar is spent carefully. And so that’s
why we’ll be doing everything step by
step.
CORIN It’s
interesting talking to people in the health sector this
week. One in the nursing sector said to me they voted
National because even though they were sympathetic to many
of the things you’re doing, because they didn’t believe
you would have enough money left after making all your
promises for the nurses, for their pay settlement. And
that’s the reality, isn’t it? The nurses aren’t going
to be able to get what they want because you’ve got so
many other things to pay
for.
DAVID We’ve
set aside money across health. We’ve said that we want to
spend more money, and we did say we wanted to spend more
money than our opponents. But we won’t be able to afford
everything straight away. Nobody pretends we can. We won’t
be able to afford everything in our first Budget. We’ve
got to do it step by step. And there is a backlog of
underfunding. We’re going to take steps to address that.
CORIN You went
into the election campaign making it clear you would deliver
all this money and you would deliver all these promises.
DAVID We will
deliver the promises we make.
CORIN In the first
term?
DAVID In the
first
term.
CORIN All
of
them?
DAVID Corin,
all of them, subject to any new information that comes to
hand.
CORIN So new
hospitals, what about—Let’s just stay back on the
nurses’ pay very quickly. Because the issue here seems to
be pay equity, isn’t it? That’s the big problem you’ve
got looming. Are nurses going to get pay equity this term?
DAVID Pay equity
is further down. It was in the negotiated offer that went
forward previously, pay equity – a shift towards that. It
is huge. Let’s not pretend it’s not. It’s a serious
issue, but it does need to be tackled. The offer that was
rejected by the nurses was more than the average offer under
the last Government. There’s no doubt their expectations
are up. But now we’ve got a process in place, and we’ve
got to approach that in good
faith.
CORIN But
why shouldn’t they get pay equity when other parts of the
health sector are and we’re hearing stories of nurses who
feel like they’re earning less than caregivers when
they’re 20 years experienced or whatever. Why shouldn't
they be getting pay equity
now?
DAVID Well,
they should be getting pay equity, but there is a process to
work through to work out how we do that.
CORIN It’s money, isn’t it? Because
according to the advice given to the Labour Party during the
coalition negotiations, the estimated cost from collective
bargaining and pay equity, if you join them together, for
the health sector over three years is $750 million. You
don’t have it, do
you?
DAVID Yeah,
these are big sums. Of course we have the money. We have
budgeted really carefully. Labour Governments and coalitions
with Labour in them are held to a higher standard. We know
that. And that’s why we did our sums very carefully when
we were in opposition, and the promises that have been made
in the coalition agreements and the confidence and supply
agreements will be kept. We have accounted for them and we
will deliver on
them.
CORIN It
would be a lot easier if your government could borrow more
money, wouldn’t it? If you relaxe the rules you’ve set
on
borrowing.
DAVID Well,
yeah, on the one hand, people want us to spend more. On the
other hand, they want us to spend less. I’m confident
we’ve got the balance right. We need to be prudent. Every
taxpayer dollar that is spent needs to be spent carefully,
and we’re determined to make sure we do
that.
CORIN The other criticism is that
you’re manufacturing a crisis. Is there a crisis in
health, for a start?
DAVID There are
some areas where there is a crisis. I think mental health
– people will acknowledge is at a crisis level. But the
reason our health system is holding together so well, and it
is, is because of the dedicated staff. We have doctors and
nurses and allied health workers who have turned up every
day in an underfunded environment for years, and they
deliver an amazing service, and New Zealanders know
that.
CORIN Let’s
get to Middlemore. Because the Prime Minister said, ‘Would
I call it a crisis? When people hear stories like
Middlemore, that’s certainly the impression you’re left
with.’ The criticism is that your government in the last
few weeks has seized on issues with Middlemore in terms of
sewage in the walls and these sorts of things, and beaten it
up to give yourself some room because you don’t have the
funds or you can’t deliver everything.
DAVID The stories
about sewage in the walls came out of the DHB, not from
Government. We are determined to address these issues, to
fix the problems that are presenting, but we’ve got to do
it step by step, and we’re taking steps to do that.
CORIN It might
have come out of the DHB, but your government, including at
a press conference on a Monday after Cabinet – we saw
Grant Robertson and the Prime Minister come down and really
push this issue of a big crisis in health and
funding.
DAVID It
is. You can’t underfund the health system for nine years
and expect nothing to happen and expect no consequences. And
I think New Zealanders will be concerned when they hear
there’s rot and mould and sewage in walls. I have to
assure them that the DHB is managing those issues, but it
does mean we have a serious programme of work
ahead.
CORIN Let’s
get to DHBs, because you’ve announced, or I understand
you’re going to announce this morning, some changes.
You’ve got chairs for those three DHBs in
Auckland?
DAVID I
have, yes. I’ve appointed Mark Gosche, former
Cabinet minister, former Pacific Island Affairs minister and
resident in Counties-Manukau to lead that DHB, and alongside
him, to support him, there will be Crown monitor. He’s
expressed a real desire to have that support because
there’s some serious
issues--
CORIN So
you don’t have confidence in that board? You’ve put in a
Crown
monitor?
DAVID Put
in a Crown monitor because they’ve got deficits blowing
out. We’ve seen the building issues. We need to have
assurance that that’s on track to address the
issues.
CORIN So
what are we supposed to read into that? You don’t have
confidence in them to an extent you have to put in one of
your people on the
board?
DAVID I want
to be really clear that we need to rejuvenate that board.
And I make no apology for that. If we have the same people
doing the same things, we’re going to get the same
results. So as minister, it’s my responsibility to make
sure that we can have public confidence in
what’s happening there going
forward.
CORIN And
do you think you handled the process of effectively pushing
out two board members as well as you could
have?
DAVID Oh, I
can understand that they’re upset. They have put
themselves forward for public service. But as Mark Darrow
himself said, these appointments are at the minister’s
discretion. They’re not an entitlement. And I need to be
sure that I can give the public assurance that we have the
right people in there going forward to address the issues
that are emerging, and I’m confident now that we’ve got
those people there.
CORIN The other
one’s Judy McGregor, Pat Snedden are the two others for
the rest of the Auckland area.
DAVID Yes. Judy
McGregor going into Waitemata. She’s a former human rights
commissioner. She is a person who is very active at AUT –
Associate Dean, head of school. And Pat Snedden is well
known in government circles. He supports Ports of Auckland,
has chaired DHBs
before.
CORIN So
you’ve got your people in there now. Will you demand that
they, like the last government, will you demand that they
deliver surpluses?
DAVID I will
expect prudent financial management.
CORIN Surpluses?
DAVID The
Chairs of the DHB understand that. I’m focused on making
sure New Zealanders get the health services they deserve and
that they spend every dollar
carefully.
CORIN Surpluses?
DAVID Every
dollar carefully. I’m not going to promise surpluses. I am
not. I am going to promise that they manage prudently and
chairs and those boards are held to account for their
financial management.
CORIN Why not
promise surpluses? Isn’t it reasonable-?
DAVID No
government has delivered surpluses in recent
history.
CORIN No,
but the expectation should be from you that it’s a
surplus. And that’s not unfair, is it, because we want
them to be delivering efficient services, and if there’s
no
consequence…
DAVID I
think first and foremost, New Zealanders need to know that
the service is there. When the kids get sick, they want to
know they can get the care they need in hospital. The next
step, and the responsibility of the boards, is to make sure
that they’re managing their finances prudently, and I
would like to see more of those boards doing better.
CORIN What we’ve
seen over the last couple of weeks with Middlemore --
isn’t it a failing of how our DHBs work? We’ve got you
squabbling with board members, you bringing in your people
you want – fair enough – change of government, we get
that. And yet there’s supposed to be a quasi-democratic
board that people get to elect some of them, but the
government has their people. Now you’re bringing in Crown
monitors. They’re not working.
DAVID Let’s not
forget we have an amazing health system. We have services
that are afforded in New Zealand more cheaply than they’re
afforded overseas. We have quality healthcare. New
Zealanders trust the service they get from doctors and
nurses in our hospitals, but we do need to make sure
they’re sustainable. And I do want to look at those issues
– I want to have a serious review – I don’t want to
throw out the baby with the bath water. The current system
delivers good, innovative
response--
CORIN Let’s
get to the nub of this. Governments have skated around this
DHB issues – well, the last couple did for a while. I know
it’s an upheaval for the sector, but will you commit to
changing the DHBs? There’s 20 of them, isn’t there?
It’s far too many for a country of this size, isn’t
it?
DAVID I won’t
promise significant change this term, but I want to make
sure that we have the best model in place to deliver
healthcare at the best price for New Zealanders.
CORIN Let’s look
at primary healthcare. Is that going to be the big focus for
you in many ways? Because that’s what’s going to make
the big cost savings, isn’t
it?
DAVID Absolutely.
Longer-term, it will. In the short term, we’ve got so much
unmet need. Last year over 500,000 New Zealanders couldn’t
afford to go to their GP. One in four adults in New Zealand
now cannot afford to go to their GP in any given year for
reasons of
cost.
CORIN So will
we see in the Budget you deliver on your promises to bring
GPs visit down by, what, $10 on average? From $40 to $30?
DAVID We’re
going to have to phase some of these initiatives. There’s
no doubt about that. I’m not going to skate around that,
and I’m not going to make the Budget announcement today,
you understand that, Corin.
CORIN But you are
signalling that that’s not coming all at
once?
DAVID We
will make healthcare more affordable, and that includes
primary
care.
CORIN So when
can someone expect to see the average get down to
30?
DAVID Corin,
I can’t announce that today. We are phasing our
priorities, but we are absolutely committed to the principle
of making sure New Zealanders can afford to visit their
GP.
CORIN Because
you’ve got to clear those DHB deficits as well, don’t
you?
DAVID We will
make sure DHBs are better funded as well. We have campaigned
on that, and you mentioned that at the outset. We do believe
that healthcare needs to be appropriately funded and
sustainably funded.
CORIN And you’ve
got a national cancer agency you’ve got to
do?
DAVID Yep,
we’ve got lots of things we’ve announced--
CORIN Will
we see that this term?
DAVID We will see
some progress in that regard. I’m having policy work done
now to tell me what the best way is of delivering those
things. We’re in government now, and that’s different. I
do have access to a lot of researches, to the best
international evidence, and I want to make sure that every
dollar I spend goes as far as it can possibly go as Minister
of Health and of course as Associate Minister of Finance.
CORIN Looking into
primary healthcare and the studies and the research done,
including your own briefing that you got from the Ministry,
the issue really seems to be about the poor health access
and outcomes for Maori, Pacific Island and those in
disadvantaged groups. It’s clear there that is the
problem. Why don’t you have a ‘closing the gaps’ type
programme targeted at those
groups?
DAVID Absolutely,
Corin. I couldn’t agree with you more. This is the reason
I got into politics. I’m concerned about the growing gap
between rich and poor. So every DHB chair, and I challenge
you – I’m pretty sure could repeat back what my
priorities are – they’re all about equity, better access
to primary
care.
CORIN Great.
But how will you do it differently? What the research seems
to show – if you just put the money in it, it’s the same
system. It’s going to go in the same ways. How will you do
it differently so that Maori, Pacific Islanders get better
health outcomes and everybody benefits?
DAVID DHBs are in
no doubt as to my priorities. And the DHB
chairs and boards will be held to account on my priorities,
and they are
equity.
CORIN So
what changes? What is the policy? Where is the plan? Where
is the detail?
DAVID The way the
model works encourages DHBs to find their own solutions to
those issues, to make their own prioritisation locally. But
there’s some really clear things, like making doctors’
visits more affordable, like making mental health more
accessible, like strengthening a public system that delivers
for everybody, no matter whose kid it is, no matter how deep
their pockets are, every New Zealander can access the care
they
need.
CORIN But
why not specifically a closing-the-gaps type programme where
you give those groups perhaps more
control?
DAVID I’m
sure that will be part of it. It doesn’t have to have a
particular brand attached to it. But it is about better
access to services for all groups in the population.
That’s why I stood for the Labour Party. That’s what
I’m here to
deliver.
CORIN Right.
Fair enough. David Clark, we’ll go to the break now.
We’ll come back, talk about mental health, because
that’s practically another whole interview in itself. All
right. Stay with us. We will back, as I say, with the Health
Minister after the break to talk about mental health, also
ask some viewer questions that you’ve sent in as
well.
[AD
BREAK]
CORIN Welcome
back to Q+A, the health minister David Clark is still with
us. We’re going to talk mental health now. Talking again
to people in the health sector this week, one of the things
that came up with mental health was actually an ED nurse,
who said they are just seeing a massive increase in the
number of presentations at emergency departments from people
suffering from mental illness. What are you going to do
about
that?
DAVID We
know that we have an aging demographic, which includes
dementia, and we have a growing population. As more people
get weeded out for care in primary care, we have more acute
demand at the emergency level. We’re going to need new
approaches, new ideas to tackling these issues. And we’re
going to need increased capacity in some
areas.
CORIN What
does that mean ‘increased capacity’? What does it look
like? Are you talking in care or in the community? What do
you
mean?
DAVID Both.
So we do need to get primary care right. That’s one of my
key priorities – making sure that people get the care they
need. I’ve been told anecdotally by emergency service
workers that about a quarter of the people they take to
hospital have conditions that are preventable if they get
the appropriate care, if people get the appropriate care in
their community. That would take a huge slug of demand out
of the system. And then at the hospital level, we need to
deliver the services that people require when they get
there.
CORIN Okay,
I know you’ve got an inquiry looking at this issue and
presumably that’s going to come up with some big,
challenging recommendations for you on mental health, and
you’ll deal with that. How quickly can you implement
those?
DAVID Yeah.
I’m imaging we won’t be able to implement them all at
once. We’ll take it budget by budget, step by step. But
the purpose of making that inquiry independent is that it
will bring forward hard recommendations. It will bring
forward challenging recommendations. And we as a government
will then have to wrestle with them. But I don’t want to
get some watered-down version as minister. My job is to
manage the prioritisation and the politics, and I’ll do
that.
CORIN Sure.
Big picture here, because I know you’ve got an inquiry,
what is your feeling about the balance in terms of our
mental health? Are we keeping people in the community too
much? Are we not putting people in care enough? Where is the
balance?
DAVID My
gut feeling is we’ve devolved care to the community
without putting resource after it. And sometimes it’s been
used as a cost-cutting measure. We need to change community
attitudes. We need to change the way we’re delivering
primary services to some extent. And we need to just make
sure that mental health is afforded the priority that it
should have. It shouldn’t be possible to cut corners for
our most
vulnerable.
CORIN You’ve
got other promises in mental health, in particular in
schools and those sorts of things. Are you going to be able
to deliver on those, having nurses or mental health care
workers in those sorts of
facilities?
DAVID There
are some things that have strong evidence behind them.
Nurses in schools is one of those things. We will continue
to roll out that programme. The cheaper doctor visits is
another way of ensuring that those services are more
accessible to people. So we will do some things in the
interim. I’m not going to announce the budget detail
today,
Corin.
CORIN Timeframes,
though? Timeframes on the nurses? Because you’ve done
Canterbury schools,
right?
DAVID We
have. We
have.
CORIN When
does the rest of the country see
it?
DAVID That will
be revealed in the
budget.
CORIN Okay,
we’ll leave it there. If we could deal with some of the
viewers’ questions that have come in. One was on the issue
of cancer, from Philip Hope, chief executive of Lung
Foundation New Zealand. He says, basically, just to sum up
his question, he’s wondering why the money taken from
tobacco tax isn’t actually directly – and it’s
billions of dollars – targeted at treatment for things
like cancer and lung
cancer.
DAVID My
understanding is a portion of that money goes towards
prevention and supporting those who are giving up. You know,
the health dollar is spread as we think best, in terms of
where we’re going to get the best bang for buck. Let’s
face it, those cancer treatments are generally publically
funded, so the money is afforded out of our general
taxation. Exactly which pot it comes from is up for
grabs.
CORIN The
other issue he raises is around the backlog of medicines on
the waiting list, and this is an interesting question,
because are you going to look at these next generation of
drugs, the ones that maybe aren’t quite proven, will you
have some money put aside to have those ones that aren’t
Pharmac funded yet, a bit more risky, but could save
lives?
DAVID Yeah.
I’m looking at all of that stuff. Again, we’ve got to
spend the health dollar carefully, and there are overseas
models and I’m getting advice on what the best next steps
are.
CORIN Where
does it sit in your big priority list? Which is quite big
today.
DAVID It
is. It is. Making sure New Zealanders can access affordable
care, starting with the priorities of primary care, mental
health and public delivery of services are my top
priorities, getting a better cancer outcome is right up
there, because so many New Zealanders face cancer. So
that’s why I’m getting good advice on
that.
CORIN But
it’s a lot of money, though, isn’t it? Jonathan Coleman
criticised you over this. He said once you get into
government, you’ll see how much it costs to have this fund
for new treatments – 60, 90 million bucks. Have you got
that sort of money for a fund like
that?
DAVID Corin,
I’ll face that when I get the advice around it. But we do
have money. We do have discretionary money. And I need to
push back on this myth that we haven’t set money aside for
new initiatives. We will deliver on the promises we’ve
made and we’ve set aside head room to deliver on other
initiatives.
CORIN All
right. Jacqui says, ‘What’s happening to the third
medical school proposal and when can we expect a final
outcome?’
DAVID That
again is an issue that I’m grappling with at the moment.
The principles are clear – if you want to address this
issue, you need to recruit from rural areas; you need to
give those GPs and others going into rural areas
opportunities for advancement when they’re in that job;
and you need to make sure that the assets that they’re
going into, the practises they’re going into, are modern.
So we know what the solution looks like. We’ve got to work
through a process where we find best to provide
that.
CORIN Connor
Roberts says, ‘Is he looking at expanding public dental
healthcare?’
DAVID Yes,
I am. And I can say to your viewers that it’s unlikely
we’ll get over the line with that this term. But it
doesn’t mean I won’t start scoping it out and working it
out, because we are prioritising which initiatives we can
deliver now, and which ones later. I’m looking at
workforce issues already, because if we do want to be more
ambitious in that space, we have to step out a plan to get
there.
CORIN So
are you looking at sort of long-term subsidies for adults to
get dental
healthcare?
DAVID We’re
right at the start of this, Corin. As I say, that won’t be
something we do this
term.
CORIN Okay,
but look into the future. Would that be your desired
goal?
DAVID I
would like to see more affordable access. We have a huge
unmet need in dental care. We have people struggling with
Third World health conditions as a result of bad dental
hygiene and inability to access the care and treatment they
need. No New Zealander would think that was okay. We have to
do better over
time.
CORIN All
right. Final question from Julian Crawford saying, ‘I
thought Labour was supposed to announce the new Dunedin
Hospital site this month. Why hasn’t anything been
announced?’
DAVID Yes,
we did say we would announce around this time, and I can
tell you an announcement is
pending.
CORIN You’re
not going to give us that this
morning?
DAVID Not
this morning,
Corin.
CORIN What
does success look like for you as a Health Minister? Just to
finish off. We’ve heard this morning that you’ve got so
many demands. You can never have enough money. What is it
going to look like?
DAVID For
me, it’s about more New Zealanders having access to the
services they need – addressing unmet need. It shouldn’t
be the case that in a First World country, we have so many
people who can’t access a GP. To me, success looks like
making sure that New Zealanders, when they’re sick, know
that they can get the services they
need.
CORIN All
right. Look forward to having you back on the show and
perhaps holding you to account to those comments. Thank you
very much for your time, David
Clark.
DAVID Thanks
very
much.
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