Health Minister Bill English said today the public health service
must continue to offer reasonable levels of elective surgery.
"There are a lot of New Zealanders, particularly older people,
who will need surgery at some stage and who will never be able
to afford it themselves.
"The public health service must be there to provide it. I am
not prepared to see elective surgery levels cut back so far
that people do not get surgery that they really need.
"I have talked for some time about my concerns that elective
surgery is used as a financial safety valve in the public health
service. What happens now is that once we have paid for the
GP visits, for the pharmaceuticals, for the community workers,
for the emergency work in our hositals, what is left over goes
to elective surgery.
"This issue has been in the public arena for some time. We have
had a lot of co-operation from doctors and nurses over the last
18 months putting in place an assessment system that will give
us greater fairness and certainty.
"Within the health budget we have the job of ensuring there is
sufficient funding to make sure there is a reasonable level
of elective surgery available to New Zealanders," said Mr English.
Ends
________________________________________________________________________
This is a copy of a media release from a NZ Minister of the Crown.
An archive of releases can be viewed at http://www.executive.govt.nz
E-mail to Ministers can be sent to mailto:mai...@mx.parliament.govt.nz
Please include a postal address if you require a reply