Minister of health Tony RyallFriday 27 August 2010, 11:17AM
Media release from minister of health Tony Ryall
Health Minister Tony Ryall is declining a request to allow
self-funded chemotherapy drugs to be administered in Dunedin
Hospital.
News that a new private chemotherapy service is planned for Dunedin
removes the primary impetus for Southern DHB's proposal to pilot
'Bridging the Gap'.
The DHB's pilot proposed to allow patients in Otago and Southland
to access self-funded cancer treatment in the public health system
instead of having to travel to Christchurch or beyond.
Currently patients can get publicly funded cancer drugs
administered in Dunedin but must travel north to get unfunded
cancer drugs.
"However, the recent announcement by Dunedin's Mercy Hospital that
it will provide a comprehensive chemotherapy service in Dunedin
aims to address this gap in private provision," says the Health
Minister.
"The new service will mean more convenient access to self-funded
cancer treatments for patients living in the Southern DHB
area."
"As a result of Mercy Hospital's new service plans, with advice
from the Ministry of Health, I am declining the request from
Southern DHB to pilot the 'Bridging the Gap' proposal," says Mr
Ryall.
"This decision will require clinicians to ensure that for those
patients receiving self-funded drugs privately there is strong
communication between public and private over the patient's
treatment programme."