No accident government health plan ignores needs of Māori

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3 Apr 2025

Gabrielle Baker

Last month’s announcements covered a health sector delivery plan, governance, “partnerships”, telemedicine, primary care funding, workforce (overseas-trained doctors, more training placements for doctors and nurse practitioners, incentives for primary care practices to recruit nurses), and lowering the age for free bowel cancer screening. Each of these is worthy of a deep dive, and there is excellent analysis on most of these announcements, much of it in New Zealand Doctor Rata Aotearoa. But I couldn’t ignore the general pattern. None of these announcements are focused on Māori health outcomes. So, what does this package mean for Māori?

The short answer: very little.

It is, of course, by design. Our political atmosphere is in an unpleasantly divisive state. The pursuits of equity and the improvement of outcomes for those who the health (and other) systems have failed have gone from being widely accepted aims to being positioned as counter to the very ideas of respect, dignity and equality before the law (when it comes to Māori anyway). Aiming to have a workforce that reflects the population has also been deemed woke and identity politics.

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Key issues

HEALTH SERVICES AND SYSTEMS

Covering developments in the provision, funding and organisation of health care services.

EQUITY

Exploring the impacts of the health system on minorities within the population, notably including Māori, Pacifica, Asians and LGBTQI.

DRUGS, DEVICE AND DIAGNOSTICS

Covering prescription medicines and medical devices.

PUBLIC HEALTH

Focusing on efforts to promote health and prevent disease through social and economic interventions.

DIGITAL HEALTH

Exploring the potential digital transformation to provide a more connected and accessible health system.

TE TIRITI

Monitoring how the health reforms and the performance of the health sector uphold Te Tiriti obligations.