Recently, I've followed media coverage from Poihaere Whare, highlighting the significant challenges faced by student nurses in New Zealand. The ongoing fuel crisis and added practical demands like travel and parking costs intensify existing student poverty. Poihaere's core message, echoed by many student nurses but long ignored by governments, is the urgent need for paid placement allowances and increased financial support.
Political decisions directly shape nurses' daily realities, influencing everything from funding, staffing, and training to patient care. Government health budgets affect employment, resources, and facilities—underfunding leads to staff shortages and burnout, while investment supports safe staffing and professional development. Immigration policies also impact nurse recruitment and retention, with recent fast-tracked residency pathways responding to workforce crises.
Nurse pay and conditions rely on political will and government funding, driving collective bargaining and affecting morale and retention. Legislative changes determine nurses' scope of practice and regulatory frameworks, as seen with nurse prescribing roles requiring political backing. Health policy priorities, such as reforms consolidating DHBs into Health New Zealand, dictate resource allocation and system direction.
Ultimately, political choices underpin every aspect of nursing in New Zealand, from paychecks and staffing to healthcare delivery. Engaging with this landscape is essential for advocating for the profession and ensuring a sustainable health system, because if we do not value the work undertaken by our nurses, we will never value nurses enough to pay them their worth.
In essence, every major aspect of a nurse's professional life in New Zealand is, to some degree, a consequence of political choices. From the number of colleagues on shift to the technology available at the bedside, and from the size of their paycheck to the very structure of the healthcare system, nurses are profoundly impacted by the decisions made in Wellington.
Understanding and engaging with this political landscape is not just an academic exercise; it is fundamental to advocating for the profession and ensuring a robust, sustainable healthcare system for all New Zealanders. Nursing students receive the same amount of student living costs as all tertiary students – but most tertiary students do not need to travel away from their campus to complete their studies. An English Literature student does not need to budget for petrol to travel for placements. A Mathematics student doesn’t need to sleep in a tent to complete their degree.
Nearly all aspects of nursing in New Zealand—from staffing levels and workplace technology to salaries and healthcare structure—are shaped by political decisions made in Wellington. Understanding and engaging with this environment is essential for effective advocacy and a strong, sustainable healthcare system. Under this government, nurses are being punished for choosing this career path, for many a generational family career or a desire to help people.