Health And Death

This is a page of facts related to health, morbidity and the health service in New Zealand. Click on links to read the source stories, all links will open in a new window.

One of New Zealand’s most shocking health statistics is its very high suicide rate. A Mental Health Commission report showed New Zealand’s suicide rate for girls aged 15 to 19 is the highest in the OECD (August 2011) source

Maternity

aim.org.nz

  • “Every year in New Zealand, more than 600 babies die during and around childbirth.  Many of these deaths are registered ’cause unknown’.
  • In New Zealand, the Ministry of Health counts ‘live’ babies and ‘dead’ babies.  There is no nationwide register for children injured or disabled at birth.  Even the most severely brain injured children don’t count as such.
  • In the 1960s New Zealand ranked amongst the top five countries in the developed world for our low infant death rate.  We’re now in the bottom ten.
  • You are twice as likely to die as a pregnant or new mother in New Zealand than you are of being killed on the roads.
  • 50% of all pregnancies in New Zealand require medical assistance for the safety of the mother and/or child.
  • 15 years ago midwives had to be trained nurses – now they don’t.  However they can now work independently and apart from any medical assistance.”

Disease, Ill Health and Morbidity

  • New Zealand is known as the skin cancer capital of the world. Within the country Taranaki has the highest incidence of skin cancer with 70.3 per 100,000 people. The next-worst is the Waitemata District Health Board region with 50.2,  the Bay of Plenty 40.8,   Nelson-Marlborough 42.8 and Southland had the lowest at 20.1. The overall rate for New Zealand rate is 51.8.

Health Service

Effects on Patient Health

  • ‘Frustrated’ geriatrician leaves – bad news for New Zealand: “Dr Gerry McGonigal has expressed frustration at the way elder care and stroke services are arranged and delivered in many New Zealand hospitals. He is returning to the UK this month. This is bad news for New Zealand, which faces an overall shortage of geriatricians. Wellington hospital not having a specialist stroke unit is very unusual for a major tertiary centre in a developed country. “I could understand a very small hospital not having a stroke unit but this is a main centre. Stroke units were one of the major therapeutic advances of the late 20th century! Without such a unit it is not possible to deliver quality stroke care and this is one of the main professional drivers I have to return to the U.K,” he says. source (9 Sept 2011)

 

  • A drug credited with saving lives is facing unacceptable delays for public funding” say a cancer specialist. MabThera, (rituximab, commonly used in other countries) is one of a new generation of smart drugs like Herceptin that targets specific characteristics of cancer cells, is already funded for an aggressive form of lymphoma. But the application for it to be used for follicular lymphoma, which makes up about a third of the 770 lymphoma cases in New Zealand, has languished among drug agency Pharmac’s decision-making processes” said Auckland oncologist Peter Browett. (source)

Effects on Medical Staff (violence at work, stress etc)

Under Staffing

  • There is a workforce crisis in New Zealand’s hospitals. Specialist senior doctors are being lost and there is a shortage of cancer specialists. Staff are lost to Australia (where the salaries are 35% higher) and to private practice. The causes are low pay by international standards, overwork and lack of resources to do the job.
  • Junior doctors at Christchurch Hospital say patients and doctors are at risk because of understaffing. A spokewoman for the RDA said that over the last 4 weekends there weren’t enough junior doctors on duty. The acute area only had 3 out of a necessary 5 juniors and there was neither an orthopaedic house surgeon, nor an acute-surgical house surgeon on duty over the weekend, or the previous night. According to a report in The Press the doctors were supported by the out-of-hours clinical coordinators who had written to the CDHB chief executive saying that “shortages were compromising patient safety.” (27 Jul 2010)

Inefficiencies

  • The education and health ministries are among the worst-performing government departments, according to a report card ranking state agencies and bosses. The report found excessive red tape, bureaucratic systems and ineffective consultation are hampering government departments. The Health Ministry, bottom for value for money overall, was “struggling“. It is “really confused, with too many sections not knowing what others are doing, and doing stuff without consultation in the affected communities.”
  1. nzreadz
    December 3, 2010 at 4:15 am | #1

    Weight Watchers New Zealand endorses McDonald’s Chicken McNuggets as a healthy food worthy of losing weight on, and has put its logo on them and on that fish sandwich. New Zealand is 2nd in the world for McDonald’s restaurants per capita. With their incessant “green” boasting and all the Kiwi jokes about fat Americans, these facts may come as a surprise to people.

  2. peaches
    June 10, 2011 at 6:04 pm | #2

    New Zealand is very similar to Soviet medicine. Poked, prodded, then dismissed unless you are dying,or they will perform some very simple blood screen. They may throw some cheap generic drug from the 1970s at you. This link to a Canadian story is descriptive.
    http://amyalkon.mensnewsdaily.com/201

  3. f2n
    November 28, 2011 at 3:56 pm | #3

    http://health.msn.co.nz/article.aspx?id=8379557

    Sick New Zealanders get access to far fewer new prescription drugs than Australians, and have to wait years longer for those that are approved, a damning report has found.

    A trans-Tasman study published in the New Zealand Medical Journal shows just 43 per cent of medications subsidised in Australia in the past decade were also subsidised for New Zealand patients.

    Kiwis missed out on 76 drugs that treat a wide range of conditions including cancers, dementia, depression, asthma, arthritis and Parkinson’s disease and others for which there are no reimbursed drugs listed.

    Australians missed out on just four medications approved here.

    Drug registration took nine months longer in New Zealand and, once registered, Kiwi patients had to wait two years longer than Australians to get a subsidised prescription.

  4. fodder2n
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