Health minister Tony RyallFriday 23 July 2010, 11:58AM
Media release from Minister of Health Tony Ryall
Thursday 22 July 10.20 am Sky City
INTRO
Good morning.
Thank you for inviting me to speak to you today to officially open
the inaugural World Health Care Networks Conference; "In Our Hands
- Transforming health systems through health care networks"
I'd like to acknowledge Dr Bev O'Keefe, Executive Chair of General
Practice New Zealand and Dr Emil Djakic, Chair of the Australian
General Practice Network.
I'd also like to extend a welcome to all conference delegates -
including our guests from overseas.
Today I'm going to cover why clinical networks - and your
leadership and engagement - are a fundamental part of the future of
the New Zealand health service.
Why Clinical Leadership?
Globally, clinical leadership is recognised as the fundamental
driver for improved patient care.
Engaging the people who have the expertise - the doctors and nurses
who keep the public health system going - strengthens the health
services' ability to provide patients with the care they
need.
As you know, primary care is at the forefront of the evolution of
clinical networks internationally. We have a strong tradition of
primary care networks here in New Zealand, particularly in the
Independent Practitioners Associations (IPAs).
Increasingly, the drive towards clinical networks reflects the need
to use resources more efficiently, to reduce duplication and manage
growing demand - all in a constrained financial environment.
And that constrained financial environment confronts most countries
in the world. Public services, including health services, are
not immune.
A new austerity drive is sweeping across Europe.
In Ireland, the Government has cut public service salaries -
including doctors, nurses and teachers - by up to 15%.
Spain has announced a 5% pay cut in public sector pay, including
Health, and a wage freeze for 2011.
Italy has established a 3 year wage freeze for all public servants
and will not replace one in five staff who leaves.
Canada has frozen wages in the public service for the next two to
three years.
The new Coalition Government in Britain says it will freeze public
service pay for two years.
Government agencies are facing 25% spending reductions over four
years and the sales tax is going up to 20%.
The NHS has to make GBP 20 billion of efficiencies over the next
four years.
It is this pressure of a constrained financial environment that
presents clinicians with an ideal opportunity; to develop formal
co-ordinated care networks that are clinician led and patient
centred.
Why Networks?
I think there are potentially three levels of clinical networks
with primary care the strong common feature:
1. At the community services level engaging
primary care, social services and the NGO sector
2. Within primary care engaging general practice
,maternity and allied health and pharmacy, and
3. integrated across primary and hospital
settings.
Networks at the community services level go well beyond the health
service. Personal and community wellbeing involves social services
and other community organisations.
Networking of these organisations in support of families is a key
principle of the Government's Whanau Ora policy.
Whanau Ora is an approach that empowers a family as a whole rather
than separately focusing on individual family members and their
problems.
It aims to deal with the "five cars up the driveway syndrome" where
multiple agencies work with individual family members often in
isolation of each other.
The Associate Health Minister Tariana Turia will be talking about
this with you tomorrow morning.
So I will comment on the other two types of health networks I've
identified; primary care networks and integrated networks across
primary and hospital care.
Primary Care Networks
Primary care offers the best way to deliver timely healthcare
closer to home for New Zealanders.
International research demonstrates that those health systems with
strong and vibrant primary care services have much better health
outcomes for a lower cost than those that focus on specialist or
tertiary care.
New Zealand's current Primary Health Care Strategy was established
in 2001.
But the changes hoped for have not been fully realised.
Last September, English academic Dr Judith Smith from the Nuffield
Trust (who will speak to you next) released a well-considered
"Critical analysis of the implementation of the Primary Health Care
Strategy" in New Zealand.
She noted that while the cost of access to services had been
reduced, the Strategy had not been able to achieve significant
change in models of care at practice and provider level.
In other words, the integrated, multi-disciplinary services had not
eventuated to the extent that was hoped for.
Importantly, Dr Smith stressed that the success of the Primary
Health Care Strategy depends on the engagement of general medical
practice.
Her message is clear. For implementation to work, clinicians
must be engaged and respected.
This Government recognises this.
We need primary health care professionals to step up and improve
your capacity to deliver better and more health services to New
Zealanders.
The Government has actively sought to involve clinical leaders in
the change agenda. The new National Health Board is clinically
dominated as is the new Health Quality and Safety Commission.
We have put doctors and nurses at the centre of this work.
And seeking your leadership and engagement is part of the
motivation behind the Government's request for Expressions of
Interest (EOI) for innovation in primary care.
And it is worth me restating the objectives of the government's
drive in primary care policy.
If demand for health services is to double over the next 10 years,
then we are not in a position to double Auckland Hospital or double
the number of nurses.
That is why we need to move services to a lower cost platform that
we can deliver care closer to home … and that is primary
care.
The primary care led EOI process and the Integrated Family Health
Centre concept in particular are patient centred.
They are also part of a prudent strategy to begin future-proofing
our health system to deal with increasing demographic and financial
pressures.
The evidence base for this comprehensive multi-disciplinary
approach suggests that these will greatly help patients to get the
right care in the right place.
That doesn't often happen now because the necessary primary teams
and infrastructure do not broadly exist.
That is why we are consolidating PHOs and asserting the importance
of leadership by doctors, nurses and pharmacists in those primary
care networks.
This is about beginning to prepare the public health service for
the future.
And that is why we turned to you. For your ideas. For your
leadership.
Our goal in government is to work with you and to provide New
Zealanders with better access to a wider range of health services
closer to home. It's a goal many of you share.
These initiatives will commence as they are ready over the coming
months, and they will take different forms.
The nine EOI primary health care groupings cover 60% of New
Zealand's population, and they are now working with their DHBs to
deliver better services closer to home than in the past.
But advances will be made carefully, inclusively and with strong
clinical engagement. If you are not involved in these EOI
groupings, please don't wait for instructions from Wellington
before innovating. I encourage you to work in your locality with
your DHB to explore new ways of buiding networks and more
integrated services.
Integration across Primary and Hospital
The third level of health networks is integrated across hospital
and primary care settings.
British Professor Paul Corrigan said that the failure to integrate
healthcare between hospital and primary care in any significant way
- despite its constant restatement as a policy objective
- is one of the greatest puzzles of health policy over the
past few decades.
Prof Corrigan suggests that the lack of critical mass in general
practice has been the main barrier. Issues like capital,
operating costs, and personnel prove daunting for any small
business looking to change its configuration.
Unlike Britain, general practice in New Zealand has evolved over
the past 15 years to be strongly networked, with high levels of
clinical competence and a wide range of innovative services.
That's why we are putting considerable effort into facilitating
primary and hospital integration as part of the new arrangements in
primary care.
This is an interface capable of causing much clinical harm and
financial waste if done badly, and much benefit, if done well. The
feedback is universal from both ends of the axis...both hospital
specialists and general practitioners see the opportunity to
improve the quality of patient service.
The way to do this is to engage all parties in "boundary-crossing"
clinical networks that share knowledge, produce efficiencies,
reduce errors, allow for better decisions and options for patients.
Most importantly, this improves the day to day communication
between different parts of the health system.
The new alliancing approach will put doctors and nurses around the
table to design new care pathways for use by doctors and nurses… to
benefit patients. Dr McCormack will talk to you about this later in
the conference programme.
If we are to make progress in new care pathways we need to break
down old barriers and suspicions, to focus on providing patient
care in the right place at the right time.
Included in that is direct access to diagnostics.
Last week two Auckland GPs ordered CT scans for their patients
without having to consult a specialist.
As you know, GPs previously were required to call the specialist to
obtain permission to refer for a CT.
Now, based on a protocol jointly developed by hospital radiologists
and primary care doctors - as part of GAIHN - GPs are able to refer
patients directly, avoiding the need for an inefficient first
approval.
GAIHN will see an additional 4,500 community diagnostic procedures
and 16,000 patients accessing radiology sooner through direct
referral by a GP.
Patients will also benefit from an extra 5,000 Primary Options
referrals to reduce acute demand.
Over time you will see ever more of these improved care
pathways.
Close
We are facing the aftermath of the global financial crisis with
growing demand for more comprehensive and high-tech health
services.
We know we need a revitalised primary health care service, and
we've made a lot of progress.
That is why the most important resource is you - the professionals
who make our health services work - and only you can lead the
changes needed.