Extracts from the New Zealand minister of health's speech to the New Zealand medical association conference. 19 April 1994

Health Care Analysis 3 (2):116-118 (1995)
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Abstract

I said at the beginning that some quantum leaps in our thinking would be required as we face up to the challenges and changes that health care delivery will and must undergo.It is not a matter of politics, it is a matter of pragmatism.It is a matter of reality and it's a matter of simply having to face up to what, may I say, has been glaringly obious for some time.I know that doctors come with a strong ethos in terms of their commitment to their patient and that is as it should be, but governments are always going to be constrained by the amount of money that is available to spend in any one particular field of health service.Within the priorities that governments have, health versus education, versus welfare, versus debt, debates will continue to be had.One of the strengths of New Zealand's health services, with its contracting arrangements, is that it is able to respond flexibly to the priorities that the government sets for the health services it seeks to deliver to every person in New Zealand.I am very optimistic that over time this new model of funding of our New Zealand health services will see a fairer distribution of the health dollars available to meet the wide range of medical needs of New Zealanders.Health care delivery is changing rapidly around the world.If we are to keep up in the future we must be realistic now. The challenge is mine as Minister of Health. The challenge is yours as health professionals. The challenge is ours as a community

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Editorial: What Does Social Meaning Mean?David Seedhouse - 1996 - Health Care Analysis 4 (1):1-4.

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