Nursing reports

Nurses to rally across New Zealand calling for increased health funding in Budget 2024

New Zealand Nurses Organisation media release, 8 May 2024

Members of the New Zealand Nurses Organisation NZNO Tōpūtanga Tapuhi Kaitiaki o Aotearoa will be holding public rallies at more than 20 locations tomorrow (Thursday 9 May), as part of NZNO’s national Day of Action 2024.

The nurses, midwives, health care assistants and kaimahi hauora will be calling on the Government to increase funding to Health in Budget 2024 to resolve the staffing crisis.

These actions follow information NZNO has received from Te Whatu Ora under the Official Information Act that revealed the extent of the staffing problem in Aotearoa New Zealand.

During the year ending 31 December 2023 more than a quarter of nursing shifts were below safe staffing targets, and some wards operated below safe staffing levels nearly all of the time.

NZNO Kaiwhakahaere Kerri Nuku said nursing staffing is still in extreme crisis with nurses still leaving for Australia on a regular basis, or leaving the profession altogether because their own and their patients’ wellbeing continue to be put at risk.

“Budget 2024 will be released at the end of the month and must include increased funding for health if we are to solve the staffing problem and develop a local nursing workforce that can provide high quality care that meets the physical and cultural needs of all New Zealanders.”

The nurses, at the Day of Action will be picketing to highlight unsafe staffing levels and speaking with the public about culturally appropriate nurse-to-patient ratios as a way of addressing the nursing staffing crisis.

Nurse-to-patient ratios have been implemented in Australia, California, British Columbia, Ireland and Wales, with exceptional results for nurses, patients and health budgets, and NZNO members want them put in place here, enforced by legislation.

But Ms Nuku says nurse-to-patient ratios are about more than just numbers.

“Skills mix and cultural appropriateness are also important to the staff we have on hand to provide care and Aotearoa could be a world leader in developing a ratios system that also meets our obligations under te Tiriti.”

At the rally nurses will be speaking about their expectations for the Budget. Student nurses will also be speaking about the need for better financial and cultural support, including being paid during their full-time clinical placements.

More than a third of nursing students don’t complete their studies and Ms Nuku says this most often results from financial hardship and a lack of cultural support for Māori and Pacific students.

“Our hope is that the Coalition Government will listen to the voices of our country’s nurses and bravely acknowledge the continuing health system crisis with a Budget that realistically addresses our alarming rates of nurse understaffing.”

 -Ends-

Media enquiries: Rob Zorn, NZNO Media and Communications Advisor: 027 431 2617 | media@nzno.org.nz

More information – NZNO Day of Action rally times and locations

Join us at the 9 May NZNO Day of Action 

We're planning actions in the following locations on Thursday 9 May. Check back here for more details as they are confirmed.

  • Whangārei, 1.30-4pm outside Theatre at Whangārei Hospital
  • Kawakawa, 1-2.30 at the Paihia/Whangārei roundabout
  • Auckland, 2-4pm on Park Road outside Auckland City Hospital
  • Auckland 2-4pm outside North Shore Hospital
  • Auckland 1.30-4pm outside Waitakere Hospital
  • Auckland 2-4pm outside Middlemore Hospital
  • Auckland 2.30-3.30pm on the corner of Ranfurly Rd and Manukau Rd, Epsom
  • Auckland, 2-4pm outside Elmwood Village, 131 Hill Road Manurewa
  • Hamilton, 1-2pm at the corner of Ohaupo Road and Lorne Street
  • Tauranga, 1-2pm at Cameron Road outside Tauranga Hospital
  • Hastings, 1-2.30pm at Stortford Lodge corner
  • New Plymouth, 2-4pm on Tukapo St, Westown opposite CAMHs car park. Southern side of Taranaki Base hospital.
  • Whanganui, 11.30-1pm outside the Hospital Main Gate
  • Palmerston North, 11.30-12.30 on Ruahine St outside the main entrance
  • Masterton, 11.30-1pm, outside Wairarapa Hospital
  • Wellington, 11.30-1pm outside Wellington Hospital
  • Porirua, 11.30-1pm at Hartham Place North (Pedestrian area) at Cobham Court (lots of parking there)   
  • Nelson, 2.30-4.30pm at Sundial Square, Richmond 
  • Christchurch, 12.30-1.45pm at Christchurch Hospital by the boat sheds bridge
  • Christchurch, 2.30-3.30pm outside Bupa Parklands, Papanui Rd
  • Dunedin, 2-4pm at Dunedin Hospital main entrance AND 9am-6pm at Meridian Mall
  • Invercargill, 9-11am on Elles Road adjacent to Kew Hospital AND 2.30-4.30pm at the Elles Road and Tay Street intersections 

Official nurse unsafe staffing figures genuinely alarming

New Zealand Nurses Organisation media release, 8 May 2024

The New Zealand Nurses Organisation NZNO Tōpūtanga Tapuhi Kaitiaki o Aotearoa has received information under the Official Information Act revealing the alarming nurse staffing crisis in New Zealand hospitals.

During the year ending 31 December 2023 more than a quarter of nursing shifts were below target staffing numbers, and some wards operated below safe staffing levels nearly all of the time.

NZNO Chief Executive Paul Goulter said the nursing staffing crisis remains a daily reality, with nurses continuing to leave because of burnout and concerns about pay and their health and safety at work.

“We have an impoverished health system that continues to be eroded by the Coalition Government’s spending restraints and frontline service cuts.

“Te Whatu Ora staffing data from 2023 reveals just how dire the situation has become and it’s no surprise nurses are leaving faster than they can be replaced.”

Mr Goulter said that of particular concern was ‘shifts below target’ at wards for the treatment of children, cancer (oncology), surgical needs, women’s health and mental health. Shifts below target indicate a heightened level of risk for patient safety, patient outcomes and nursing workforce safety. Patient mortality increases with exposure to increased numbers of shifts below target.

“More than half of the country’s children’s wards are understaffed at least 20 percent of the time. The Neonatal Intensive Care ward at Waipapa Christchurch Hospital (865 shifts below target) was understaffed for nearly 80 percent of all shifts last year.

“Five out of eight adult inpatient oncology wards were understaffed 20 percent of the time or more, with the most understaffed being Waikato Hospital Ward M05 (638 shifts below target). This fell below the rate of understaffing of Starship Hospital’s children’s cancer Ward 27B, which reported 791 shifts below target or nearly three quarters of all shifts in 2023.

“Fifty-six percent of surgical wards are understaffed 20 percent of the time or more, with the most understaffed being Waikato Hospital’s M08 Neurosurgery Ward (735 shifts below target)

“Almost half of women’s health wards are understaffed 20 percent of the time or more, with the most understaffed with Middlemore Hospital accounting for five of the six highest shifts below target reports.”

But mental health wards report the most acute levels of understaffing. Three wards reported more than 1000 shifts below target, with the Mason Clinic’s Tane Whakapiripiri ward in Waitematā being understaffed 99.45 percent of the time. This means only six shifts were safely staffed there in 2023. 

Mr Goulter said this is what failure to properly fund health looks like on the front line and that the data shows we simply cannot afford any further service or funding cuts.

“Budget 2024 will be released at the end of the month and may be the Coalition Government’s last chance to show they care about health and to address the staffing problem by funding proper patient care for our loved ones and whānau into the future.”

On Thursday 9 May nurses across Aotearoa New Zealand will be holding public rallies at more than 20 locations across the country where they will picket and speak about safe staffing issues and solutions such as legally mandated nurse-to-patient ratios.

-Ends-

Media enquiries: Rob Zorn, NZNO Media and Communications Advisor: 027 431 2617 | media@nzno.org.nz

 

More information – Te Whatu Ora shifts below target 2023

Through a recent OIA request, NZNO received shift below target data from Te Whatu Ora from 540 public health wards over the reporting period 1 January 2022 – 31 December 2023. This report includes detailed analysis of trends and insights into the scale and extent of understaffing in public hospitals reported through the CCDM programme.

The full OIA response from Te Whatu Ora is available to journalists on request.

Shifts below target

Shifts below target indicate a heightened level of risk for patient safety, patient outcomes and nursing workforce safety and morale. Shifts below target mean there is inadequate staffing in either the numbers of staff on the floor or the skill mix and competencies of staff available to provide patient care. This can increase the incidence of adverse events or near misses such as falls or medication errors, care rationing where care is missed, delayed or sub-optimally delivered or in some cases work left undone due to lack of time, resource, or communication. Patient mortality increases with exposure to increased number of shifts below target.

Official information request

Te Whatu Ora’s response to our official information request reveals that widespread and sustained understaffing remains at crisis levels across Aotearoa New Zealand. Here are some salient points from the data provided in answer to our OIA request; mostly from 1 January – 31 December 2023.

  • On average more than one in four (26 percent) Te Whatu Ora hospital shifts (n=158,966) were understaffed in 2023.
  • The three Auckland districts (Auckland, Counties and Waitematā) accounted for just over one third (34.5 percent) of all understaffed shifts reported last year, reporting a combined 54,834 shifts below target in 2023.
  • This single district reporting the highest number of shifts below target in 2023 was Capital, Coast and Hutt Valley, reporting 22,163 shifts below target.
  • Of the 540 Te Whatu Ora hospital wards where shifts below target data was provided, 297 reported shifts below target for at least 20 percent of all shifts in 2023.
  • There were 168 wards that reported shifts below target of at least 33 percent of the time in 2023. Seventy-eight wards reported shifts below target rates greater than 50 percent of the time.
  • Twenty Te Whatu Ora hospital wards reported shifts below target for more than two thirds of all shifts.
  • The four wards reporting the highest levels of understaffing are in the mental health sector, all reporting more shifts below target for more than 90 percent of shifts in 2023 in Waitematā and Capital, Coast and Hutt Valley districts.
  • Mental health related wards comprise 7 of the 20 most understaffed wards in 2023.
  • More than half (55.5 percent) of the 63 children’s wards for which data was provided reported shifts below target more than 20 percent of the time. Fifteen children’s wards reported shifts below target more than 50 percent of the time.
  • The most understaffed children’s ward in 2023 was the Neonatal Intensive Care ward at Waipapa Christchurch Hospital, reporting 865 shifts below target.
  • Five of the eight adult inpatient oncology wards reported shifts below target more than 20 percent of the time.
  • The most understaffed oncology ward was Waikato Hospital ward M05 Haematology Oncology, reporting 638 shifts below target in 2023, more than half of all shifts.
  • Fifty-six percent of surgical wards reported shifts below target more than 20 percent of the time.
  • The most understaffed surgical ward in 2023 was Waikato Hospital’s M08 Neurosurgery ward, reporting 735 shifts below target. This is a 53 percent increase in reported shifts below target from 2022.
  • Thirty-seven (nearly half) of the 79 women’s health wards reported shifts below target more than 20 percent of the time. Of these 24 reported shifts below target more than a third of the time.
  • Middlemore Hospital accounts for five of the top six highest shifts below target reports in women’s health wards in 2023.
  • All five of the women’s health and maternity wards at Middlemore Hospital were understaffed at a rate more than 50 percent of the time.
  • Fifty-two (57 percent, n=91) of mental health wards reported shifts below target more than 20 percent of the time.
  • Mental health wards report the most acute levels of understaffing in the health system.
  • Three wards reported over 1000 shifts below target in 2023. The Mason Clinic’s Tane Whakapiripiri ward in Waitematā was understaffed for 99.45 percent of all shifts in 2023, and the Te Aka ward was understaffed for 97.72 percent of all shifts. 

Government pay equity proposal a blow for women and community health

New Zealand Nurses Organisation media release, 2 May 2024

The New Zealand Nurses Organisation NZNO Tōpūtanga Tapuhi Kaitiaki o Aotearoa (NZNO) say the Government’s proposal, announced today, to disestablish the Pay Equity Taskforce within Te Kawa Mataaho Public Service Commission is extremely regrettable.

NZNO Chief Executive Paul Goulter says women being paid less than men, even though they do work of equal value, remains widespread across the country.

“To disband the expert group of people tasked with supporting pay equity for women before this work is complete in New Zealand is unwise and speaks again of the Government’s misdirected priorities.

“The demise of the taskforce will come with a huge loss in terms of the knowledge and skills required to ensure women do not remain the victims of sex-based wage discrimination. These skills were of huge benefit to both employers and the unions representing their employees in sorting pay equity issues.”

Paul Goulter says the Government appears to be divesting its pay equity responsibilities under the Equal Pay Act to public sector agencies, making them responsible for meeting pay equity obligations from here on.

“And it’s really ominous that the Government has still not committed to closing the massive pay equity gap around the non-state (funded) sector – for example the huge difference between what nurses are paid in our hospitals as opposed to our general practices, community health and support services, Māori and iwi health providers, Plunket and so on.

“These forms of Primary Care are hugely important for preventing ill health and reducing the burden on our public hospitals and emergency departments. But they are under serious threat because the pay gap makes it hard for them to attract or retain staff. You and I and our loved ones pay the price for that.”

He says there is time for the Government to reverse this decision.

“Instead of dismantling the mechanisms we need to achieve pay equity, we’d like to see the Government actually honouring its pre-election promise to pay all nurses equally, by strongly committing to establishing pay equity across the funded sector (Primary/Community Health).”

-Ends-

Media enquiries: Rob Zorn, NZNO Media and Communications Advisor: 027 431 2617 | media@nzno.org.nz


Government not vigorous enough in growing nurses to achieve health targets

New Zealand Nurses Organisation media release, 8 March 2024

The New Zealand Nurses Organisation Tōpūtanga Tapuhi Kaitiaki o Aotearoa (NZNO) says it’s great the Government has announced five new health targets, but wonders how they will be met without a full nursing workforce that is locally grown and culturally safe.

NZNO Kaiwhakahaere Kerri Nuku said we are not going to achieve reduced wait times and better treatment while our hospitals and emergency departments remain clogged and our Primary Health Care centres are closing.

“Every day we read news reports of GP practices shutting up shop or reducing services while they lose both doctors and nurses. Nurses are increasingly looking at moving overseas, because they feel disillusioned with a health system that remains underfunded, understaffed and fundamentally unsafe.”

Ms Nuku said we need a robust workforce that can provide the high-quality care Dr Reti envisions for all the people of New Zealand.

“For those most in need in Aotearoa that must include a culturally safe workforce, so people receive care that is appropriate for them and helps them engage with services.

“Unfortunately we’re not seeing any real action around this and it would be great if the Government’s ‘vigorous new direction in health’ included more vigour in attracting New Zealanders to take up nursing studies, especially Māori and Pacific people.

“We need Pay Equity across all of nursing so people are guaranteed a good job when they graduate, and we need students to be supported financially and culturally while they study so they make it to the end and graduate.”

She said that if the Government doesn’t do these things with vigour, the challenges it has set itself will go unmet.

“We must commit to growing our own workforce, and NZNO wants to be part of that workforce strategy.

“Then maybe these targets could be achieved via high quality health care for our diverse population delivered through services that are culturally safe and closer to the communities that need them.”

-Ends-

Media inquiries: Rob Zorn, NZNO Media and Communications Advisor: 027 431 2617 | media@nzno.org.nz.


Student nursing survey reveals significant training barriers

New Zealand Nurses Organisation media release, 27 December 2023

The New Zealand Nurses Organisation Tōpūtanga Tapuhi Kaitiaki o Aotearoa (NZNO) bi-annual National Nursing Student Survey closed late in 2023.

Further details and commentary will be released in 2024 once analysis is complete. However, a preliminary analysis reveals student nurses face a number of significant barriers to completing their studies that must be removed if we are to attract and retain students and grow our own nursing workforce.

The 2023 survey was completed by more than 1400 student NZNO members up from 685 in 2021 and Co-chair of the NZNO National Student Unit Shannyn Bristowe said issues of hardship are particularly intense for Māori tauira (students) who typically enter nursing at a later stage in life, often having families and increased responsibilities.

“There is a particularly important need for appropriate cultural support and pastoral care which was cited as integral to students feeling safe and understood in both their study and clinical placements.

“Māori and Pasifika tauira often face unique practical and cultural barriers, including travel, whānau obligations and language difficulties. 

“But these nurses are essential to the people of Aotearoa New Zealand receiving the culturally appropriate care that will improve health outcomes for Māori and Pasifika and save health system resources. We need to find ways to support Māori and Pasifika students in particular.”

She said the survey is one way nursing students can express their concerns and let the Government know what changes it could make to attract and retain more of them.

“We’re hoping the New Government will listen and adjust the way it plans to support nursing students.”

“Fewer students would drop out if they received financial assistance while they completed their courses. Helping pay off graduates’ student loans is a nice gesture from Government, but it doesn’t address the real hardship they face while they study,” Ms Bristowe said.

“Many just can’t carry on because of financial pressure added to other stresses.

“We face an alarming nursing crisis long into the future. If we’re serious about addressing that crisis, why can’t we find a way to give nurses free training as we do with many other essential trades and professions? Most students would have no problem with some form of bonding in return.”

Another predominant theme was how hardship impacts on physical and mental wellbeing. The cost of clinical placements during training (petrol, parking, travel and accommodation were identified as a particular pressure point and 84 percent of respondents said students should receive some form of financial compensation during clinical experience.  

“Supporting nursing students financially now, instead of helping pay off their loans after they’ve graduated, could see us producing up to a third more students and if the Government really has the wellbeing of the health system to heart it needs to reduce every single barrier it can. This is vital for the future wellbeing of us all.”

Interestingly, 33 percent of respondents had been impacted by extreme weather events, with flooding, road closures, and the cancelling of clinical placement days cited.

However, Ms Bristowe said the most significant concern from the survey was that more than 30 percent of respondents said the barriers made them question whether nursing was right for them.

-Ends-

Media inquiries: Rob Zorn, NZNO Media and Communications Advisor: 027 431 2617 | media@nzno.org.nz.


NZNO member meetings put Te Whatu Ora on notice

New Zealand Nurses Organisation media release, 24 November 2023

The collective agreement ratified in August by members of the New Zealand Nurses Organisation Tōpūtanga Tapuhi Kaitiaki o Aotearoa (NZNO) who work for Te Whatu Ora will expire in less than a year and the union says these members have unfinished business with their employer.

NZNO Chief Executive Paul Goulter said NZNO Te Whatu Ora members are committed to continuing pressure for the nursing workforce to be valued, specifically around such issues as nurse-to-patient ratios, safe staffing levels, health and safety at work and meaningful pay and pay rises.

“Our Te Whatu Ora members will be attending around 40 paid union meetings (originally known as ‘stop works’) from 27 November to 1 December. The purpose of the meetings is to put the new Government and Te Whatu Ora on notice that they must increase funding to the health sector and fix the nursing shortage.”

The new Government is planning to release a mini-Budget in December that will shape public spending for the next three years, and Paul Goulter says Health needs to top the list of Government spending priorities in that mini-Budget.

“NZNO needs to be part of that conversation to help ensure everything is being done to secure 4000+ extra nurses and health care workers. Ultimately our patients will pay the price for hospitals that are continuously understaffed and under-resourced.”

Paul Goulter says the meetings will also mark the start of the campaign around the 2024 collective agreement and members will discuss how they will continue the fight for safe staffing in 2024.

“Te Whatu and the new Government must meet our demands in order to ensure the wellbeing of our staff, patients and health system.

“Te Whatu Ora has an obligation to provide a safe and properly staffed workplace and we intend to hold them to that obligation.”

He said that according to the Employment Relations Act, arrangements will be made with Te Whatu Ora to have enough staff on hand to keep health workplaces functioning during meeting times.

-Ends-

Note to journalists:

  • A copy of the meetings schedule is attached to this release.
  • Journalists will not be able to attend meetings but may wish to interview NZNO members before or after meetings that have been arranged off-site. Members will be carrying placards and, in some cases, arriving at meetings by bus.
  • Local member spokespeople are available for many of the regions where meetings are being held.

Media enquiries: Rob Zorn, NZNO Media and Communications Advisor: 027 431 2617 | media@nzno.org.nz


NZNO condemns violence against health workers in Middle East

New Zealand Nurses Organisation media release, 19 October 2023

The New Zealand Nurses Organisation Tōpūtanga Tapuhi Kaitiaki o Aotearoa (NZNO) condemns all acts of terrorism and violence against civilians occurring in the Israel-Palestine conflict and says both sides must respect and protect access to health care and ensure the safety of civilians and health workers.

NZNO Kaiwhakahaere Kerri Nuku says health workers are continuing to deliver emergency medical care in the conflict areas with no regard to ethnicity, race, religion or political affiliation. But they are being put at enormous risk by doing so and tragically, many have been injured or killed.

“International humanitarian law is really clear that access to health care is a human right, and that health services and workers must never be a target for bullets and bombs.

“Unfortunately thousands are being injured and killed, and in particular we condemn the bombing of al-Ahli Hospital in Gaza which has left so many wounded and dead.

“It is the vulnerable, the children, the elderly and the infirm who pay the highest price in any war, and this Is made a greater horror when the very institutions bringing safety and healing are attacked. It’s barbarous and an absolute disgrace.”

Ms Nuku says she also wants to express the solidarity of New Zealand nurses, midwives, health care assistants and kaimahi hauora with their counterparts in the Middle East.

“The nursing crisis is worldwide and we are sure these health workers were already struggling before this conflict began. We can only image the extent of death and injury, and the soul-destroying suffering they do their best to deal with every day.

“These courageous and compassionate workers need to be left to do their jobs without fearing their own and their patients’ lives and wellbeing.

“NZNO stands with its brave colleagues in both Israel and Palestine and hopes for a swift end to the violence, the destruction and the intolerable suffering of the innocent.”

-Ends-

Media enquiries: Rob Zorn, NZNO Media and Communications Advisor: 027 431 2617 | media@nzno.org.nz


NZNO President urges Kiwi to vote health

New Zealand Nurses Organisation media release, 12 October 2023

The President of the New Zealand Nurses Organisation Tōpūtanga Tapuhi Kaitiaki o Aotearoa (NZNO) wants people living in Aotearoa New Zealand to vote with health in mind on Saturday.

Anne Daniels, herself an emergency department nurse at Dunedin Hospital, said health should be just as important a consideration for voters this election as the cost of living and crime.

“Health has become somewhat of a “wicked problem” in Aotearoa New Zealand because the harms are rife and there is no short-term solution.

“We need to be voting people into power now who will set the groundwork for finding 4000 more nurses in a hurry, who will reduce costs and restore health justice by finding and employing more Māori and Pasifika nurses and who have the foresight to see that funding health properly now will save the system money and resources in the long run.”

Ms Daniels said she sees the results of underfunding and the under-prioritisation of health every day in her work and in her interactions around the country with nurse and other health worker members.

“People need to realise that the long wait times and the care rationing that are currently happening will just get worse and worse. This has serious implications for everyone needing health care.”

She said nurses know what’s needed to fix the problem: more nurses; pay and conditions that attract and retain nursing staff; nurse-to-patient ratios; and culturally appropriate care for Māori and Pasifika.

“Unfortunately some political parties don’t have a real grasp of these things and do not have policies that will address them.

“Parties proposing tax cuts or the dismantling of Te Aka Whai Ora (the Māori Health Authority), for example, don’t get it at all.

“These things would only create further barriers to people already struggling to access health care in their communities or who have to suffer long unhealthy waits in the emergency department.

“Health is a massive issue this election and I hope people will have that in mind when they choose which party and candidate to back on 14 October.”

-Ends-

Media enquiries: Rob Zorn, NZNO Media and Communications Advisor: 027 431 2617 | media@nzno.org.nz


Auckland nurses to picket for safe staffing

New Zealand Nurses Organisation media release, 5 October 2023

Nurses, midwives, health care assistants and kaimahi hauora will come to Manurewa from all over to Auckland to picket in support of safe staffing on Thursday 5 October.

The New Zealand Nurses Organisation Tōpūtanga Tapuhi Kaitiaki o Aotearoa (NZNO) members will congregate holding signs at 131 Hill Rd, Manurewa at 1.30pm and will also approach members of the public to talk about the importance of the health workforce this election.

Auckland NZNO delegate Ben Basevi said the point of the picket was to call on the public to vote for Health at the ballot box on 14 October.

“We are calling on the public to support those political parties that will commit to resolving the staffing crisis in health care, in particular the urgent need for 4000 more nurses.

“People, including our politicians, may not yet fully realise the impact the nursing shortage has on our health system and how this will affect their care, and the care of their loved ones and whānau when they need it.

“The incoming Government, no matter what its composition, must take urgent action to reduce the nursing shortage. That means making the profession attractive to new students, and addressing frontline needs to ensure we keep the nurses we already have.”

He said parties needed to develop policies around issues such as more Māori and Pasifika nurses so people get culturally appropriate care and need the health system less; funded free training for nursing students so they don’t start work with a massive debt; decent wages and Pay Parity across the health system so every nurse everywhere is equally valued; and legally mandated staff-to-patient ratios to help ensure the safety of nurses and the people they care for.

NZNO’s scorecard of political parties’ health policies* will be distributed from a stall at the picket and will also be handed to members of the public in one-on-one conversations.

“We’ll be encouraging people to enrol and vote with health foremost in their minds because we simply cannot carry on as we are,” Ben Basevi said.

“People need to enrol and vote for the good of their whānau and communities.”

The picket is expected to conclude at around 3.30pm.

-Ends-

* NZNO’s political scorecard is available at: https://maranga-mai.nzno.org.nz/scorecard.

Media enquiries: Rob Zorn, NZNO Media and Communications Advisor: 027 431 2617 | media@nzno.org.nz


National’s health policies hollow without workforce

New Zealand Nurses Organisation media release, 3 October 2023

The New Zealand Nurses Organisation Tōpūtanga Tapuhi Kaitiaki o Aotearoa (NZNO) says the National Party’s new health policies announced today ring hollow because they don’t address the missing workforce needed to deliver them.

NZNO Kaiwhakahaere Kerri Nuku said there was nothing new in what National announced and that the policies, while laudable in themselves, presupposed there were sufficient health staff available to deliver them.

“Increasing maternity services is a great idea, but how are you going to do that without the nurses and midwives to support new and expecting mothers?

“Increasing clinical training placements is also great, but what will National do to make nursing and other health worker training more attractive – other than student loan payoffs that come too late to really help struggling nursing students?”

Ms Nuku said recruiting and retaining nurses, midwives, health care assistants and kaimahi hauora is the ‘make or break’ behind any health policy and that National is conspicuously quiet on how it will urgently recruit 4000 nurses or respond to the needs of frontline staff so they will stay in their jobs.

“Christopher Luxon has said National ‘will be doing everything [they] can to boost the health workforce,’ but very little beyond that.

“What about funded free training for nursing students so they don’t start work with a massive debt in the first place? What about more Māori and Pasifika nurses so people receive culturally appropriate care and need health services less?

“What about decent wages and Pay Parity across the health system so every nurse everywhere is equally valued and earns the same according to their experience and qualifications? What about mandated staff-to-patient ratios to help ensure the safety of nurses and the people they care for?”

She said health should be at the top of discussion this election because the system is hanging by a thread and will fall apart unless more nurses are found and/or kept.

“That has serious implications for the health care we and our loved ones receive, and we need to be putting concrete solutions in place now. The best health policy in the world will fail miserably without the workforce in place to support it.”

-Ends-

Media enquiries: Rob Zorn, NZNO Media and Communications Advisor: 027 431 2617 | media@nzno.org.nz


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