263 results
Search Results
2. Inclusion of palliative care in health care policy for older people: A directed documentary analysis in 13 of the most rapidly ageing countries worldwide.
- Author
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Pivodic, Lara, Smets, Tinne, Gott, Merryn, Sleeman, Katherine E, Arrue, Borja, Cardenas Turanzas, Marylou, Pechova, Karolina, Kodba Čeh, Hana, Lo, Tong Jen, Nakanishi, Miharu, Rhee, YongJoo, ten Koppel, Maud, Wilson, Donna M, and Van den Block, Lieve
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COMMUNICATION ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,CONTINUUM of care ,DOCUMENTATION ,INTEGRATED health care delivery ,HEALTH policy ,PALLIATIVE treatment ,WORLD health ,GOVERNMENT policy ,HUMAN services programs - Abstract
Background: Palliative care is insufficiently integrated in the continuum of care for older people. It is unclear to what extent healthcare policy for older people includes elements of palliative care and thus supports its integration. Aim: (1) To develop a reference framework for identifying palliative care contents in policy documents; (2) to determine inclusion of palliative care in public policy documents on healthcare for older people in 13 rapidly ageing countries. Design: Directed documentary analysis of public policy documents (legislation, policies/strategies, guidelines, white papers) on healthcare for older people. Using existing literature, we developed a reference framework and data extraction form assessing 10 criteria of palliative care inclusion. Country experts identified documents and extracted data. Setting: Austria, Belgium, Canada, Czech Republic, England, Japan, Mexico, Netherlands, New Zealand, Singapore, Slovenia, South Korea, Spain. Results: Of 139 identified documents, 50 met inclusion criteria. The most frequently addressed palliative care elements were coordination and continuity of care (12 countries), communication and care planning, care for family, and ethical and legal aspects (11 countries). Documents in 10 countries explicitly mentioned palliative care, nine addressed symptom management, eight mentioned end-of-life care, and five referred to existing palliative care strategies (out of nine that had them). Conclusions: Health care policies for older people need revising to include reference to end-of-life care and dying and ensure linkage to existing national or regional palliative care strategies. The strong policy focus on care coordination and continuity in policies for older people is an opportunity window for palliative care advocacy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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3. A thematic analysis of alcohol and alcohol-related harm across health and social policy in Aotearoa New Zealand.
- Author
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Darrah T, Herbert S, and Chambers T
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- Humans, New Zealand, Alcoholic Beverages, Harm Reduction, Alcohol Drinking prevention & control, Alcohol Drinking adverse effects, Public Policy, Health Policy
- Abstract
Objective: This study aims to: 1) explore how alcohol and alcohol harm are framed in New Zealand national policy, strategy, and action plan documents; and 2) examine how these documents align with the WHO SAFER framework., Methods: Keyword searches across government websites and Google were conducted in January 2021. Inclusion and exclusion criteria were applied to all identified documents, resulting in 22 being included for analysis in this study. An inductive and deductive thematic analysis of those documents was performed., Results: Our inductive thematic analysis identified three themes, of which one is detailed in this study: 'Location of responsibility for addressing alcohol harms' with a focus on individuals and non-specific government agencies. Thematic results from the deductive analysis found that the most consistently referenced SAFER policies included brief interventions (68% of documents), followed by drink driving measures (45%), alcohol marketing (36%), alcohol availability (27%), and alcohol price (23%). The conversion rate from a document mentioning a SAFER framework policy area to making specific policy recommendations was usually less than or around 50%., Conclusions: The lack of alignment between New Zealand alcohol policy and the SAFER framework can be partially attributable to the absence of an updated national alcohol strategy (NAS). An updated NAS should identify responsible agencies, create a systematic monitoring and evaluation mechanism, and be consistent with the WHO SAFER framework., Implications for Public Health: The analysis supports the need to update a national alcohol strategy to guide alcohol policy development., Competing Interests: Conflicts of interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
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- 2024
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4. Implementing new forms of collaboration and participation in primary health care: leveraging past learnings to inform future initiatives.
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Middleton, Lesley, O'Loughlin, Claire, Tenbensel, Tim, Silwal, Pushkar, Churchward, Marianna, Russell, Lynne, and Cumming, Jacqueline
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INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,PRIMARY health care ,HEALTH policy ,INTERVIEWING ,SOCIAL services ,CONTINUUM of care ,COMMUNITIES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,HEALTH care reform ,PATIENT-centered care ,THEMATIC analysis ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,RESEARCH methodology ,TRUST ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,INTEGRATED health care delivery ,PATIENT participation - Abstract
Introduction. Within primary health care policy, there is an increasing focus on enhancing involvement with secondary health care, social care services and communities. Yet, translating these expectations into tangible changes frequently encounters significant obstacles. As part of an investigation into the progress made in achieving primary health care reform in Aotearoa New Zealand, realist research was undertaken with those charged with responsibility for national and local policies. The specific analysis in this paper probes primary health care leaders' assessments of progress towards more collaboration with other health and non-health agencies, and communities. Aim. This study aimed to investigate how ideas for more integration and joinedup care have found their way into the practice of primary health care in Aotearoa New Zealand. Methods. Applying a realist logic of inquiry, data from semi-structured interviews with primary health care leaders were analysed to identify key contextual characteristics and mechanisms. Explanations were developed of what influenced leaders to invest energy in joined-up and integrated care activities. Results. Our findings highlight three explanatory mechanisms and their associated contexts: a willingness to share power, build trusting relationships and manage task complexity. These underpin leaders' accounts of the success (or otherwise) of collaborative arrangements. Discussion. Such insights have import in the context of the current health reforms for stakeholders charged with developing local approaches to the planning and delivery of health services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Editorial.
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Carr, Neil and Duncan, Tara
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HEALTH policy ,DECISION making ,ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc. ,PHYSICAL activity - Published
- 2012
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6. Promoting health in the digital environment: health policy experts' responses to on-demand delivery in Aotearoa New Zealand.
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McKerchar C, Bidwell S, Curl A, Pocock T, Cowie M, Miles H, and Crossin R
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- Humans, New Zealand, Built Environment, Ethanol, Fast Foods, Health Policy, Public Policy
- Abstract
Services offering on-demand delivery of unhealthy commodities, such as fast food, alcohol and smoking/vaping products have proliferated in recent years. It is well known that the built environment can be health promoting or harmful to health, but there has been less consideration of the digital environment. Increased availability and accessibility of these commodities may be associated with increased consumption, with harmful public health implications. Policy regulating the supply of these commodities was developed before the introduction of on-demand services and has not kept pace with the digital environment. This paper reports on semi-structured interviews with health policy experts on the health harms of the uptake in on-demand delivery of food, alcohol and smoking/vaping products, along with their views on policies that might mitigate these harms. We interviewed 14 policy experts from central and local government agencies and ministries, health authorities, non-Government Organisations (NGOs) and university research positions in Aotearoa New Zealand using a purposive sampling strategy. Participants concerns over the health harms from on-demand services encompassed three broad themes-the expansion of access to and availability of unhealthy commodities, the inadequacy of existing restrictions and regulations in the digital environment and the expansion of personalized marketing and promotional platforms for unhealthy commodities. Health policy experts' proposals to mitigate harms included: limiting access and availability, updating regulations and boosting enforcement and limiting promotion and marketing. Collectively, these findings and proposals can inform future research and public health policy decisions to address harms posed by on-demand delivery of unhealthy commodities., (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press.)
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- 2023
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7. A "bottom up" Health in All Policies program: Supporting local government wellbeing approaches.
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Lauzon, Chantal, Stevenson, Anna, Peel, Kirsty, and Brinsdon, Sandy
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WELL-being ,HEALTH policy ,LOCAL government ,GOVERNMENT aid ,HEALTH impact assessment - Abstract
Issue Addressed: A wellbeing economy requires multiple inputs to enable the wholistic vision of a sustainable healthy population and planet. A Health in All Policies (HiAP) approach is a useful way to support policy makers and planners to implement the activities required to support a wellbeing economy. Outline of the Project: Aotearoa New Zealand's Government has explicitly set a path towards a wellbeing economy. Here, we report the utility of a HiAP approach in Greater Christchurch, the largest urban area in the South Island of New Zealand, to achieving the shared societal goals of a sustainable healthy population and environment. We use the World Health Organisation draft Four Pillars for HiAP implementation as a framework for discussion. So What?: The paper adds to the growing number of examples of city and regions supporting a wellbeing agenda, specifically focused on some of the successes and challenges for local HiAP practitioners working within a public health unit in influencing this work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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8. The health care home in New Zealand: rolling out a new model of primary health care.
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Cumming, Jacqueline, Dunn, Phoebe, Middleton, Lesley, and O’Loughlin, Claire
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MATHEMATICAL models ,MEDICAL quality control ,MEDICAL care use ,MEDICAL care costs ,HEALTH policy ,ORGANIZATIONAL effectiveness ,PRIMARY health care ,EVIDENCE-based medicine ,THEORY ,HUMAN services programs ,EVALUATION of human services programs - Abstract
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to report on the origins, development and early impacts of a Health Care Home (HCH) model of care being rolled out around New Zealand (NZ).Design/methodology/approach This paper draws on a literature review on HCHs and related developments in primary health care, background discussions with key players, and a review of significant HCH implementation documents.Findings The HCH model of care is emerging from the sector itself and is being tailored to local needs and to meet the needs of local practices. A key focus in NZ seems to be on business efficiency and ensuring sustainability of general practice – with the assumption that freeing up general practitioner time for complex patients will mean better care for those populations. HCH models of care differ around the world and NZ needs its own evidence to show the model’s effectiveness in achieving its goals.Research limitations/implications It is still early days for the HCH model of care in NZ and the findings in this paper are based on limited evidence. Further evidence is needed to identify the model’s full impact over the next few years.Originality/value This paper is one of the first to explore the HCH model of care in NZ. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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9. Responding to Omicron: Speaker Commitment and Legitimisation in COVID-related Press Conferences.
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Szczyrbak, Magdalena and Tereszkiewicz, Anna
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PRESS conferences ,SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant ,INTERSUBJECTIVITY ,HEALTH policy ,PUBLIC officers ,COVID-19 - Abstract
Copyright of Studies in Polish Linguistics is the property of Jagiellonian University Press and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2023
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10. Health activism against barriers to indigenous health in Aotearoa New Zealand.
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Came, H. A., McCreanor, T., and Simpson, T.
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PREVENTION of racism ,COST effectiveness ,ECONOMICS ,HEALTH services accessibility ,HEALTH status indicators ,INDIGENOUS peoples ,HEALTH policy ,PATIENT advocacy ,PRACTICAL politics ,PUBLIC administration ,EVIDENCE-based medicine ,PROFESSIONAL practice ,HEALTH of indigenous peoples - Abstract
Racism and government policies of colonisation and assimilation contribute to the disproportionate burden of disease carried by indigenous people globally. In colonial contexts such as Aotearoa New Zealand, these inequities are routinely monitored but governments believe economic growth and better lifestyles will resolve the issues. Stop Institutional Racism (STIR), a group of health activists, is challenging this dominant discourse and building a boutique social movement to transform racism within the New Zealand public health sector. Central to the work of STIR is partnership between indigenous and non-indigenous practitioners underpinned by Te Tiriti o Waitangi – the founding document of the colonial state of New Zealand. This paper reflects on STIR organisational processes and political achievements to date. We have worked towards mobilising the public health sector, re-energising the conversation around racism and strengthening the capacity and evidence base of the sector around key sites of racism and anti-racism praxis. This paper will be of interest to others within the global public health community who are looking for new collective ways to organise and challenge entrenched inequities. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2017
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11. The human and health costs of failure to implement pro-Tiriti and pro-equity health policies: let's act as if we know this.
- Author
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Crampton P
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- Humans, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander, New Zealand, Health Care Costs, Health Equity, Health Policy legislation & jurisprudence, Health Services, Indigenous
- Abstract
Competing Interests: Peter Crampton is a researcher and lecturer at the University of Otago. In 2018 he gave evidence to the 2018 Waitangi Tribunal on alleged failures of the Crown to properly implement it’s 2001 Primary Health Care Strategy. He was a member of the panel that reviewed the health system on behalf of government (the Simpson report), and in 2020–2021 he was a member of the expert advisory group for the claimants who commissioned an analysis of the costs of underfunding Māori primary healthcare organisations. There was no external funding source for preparing this article. The views, opinions, findings and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this paper are strictly those of the author. The paper is presented not as policy, but with a view to inform and stimulate wider debate.
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- 2021
12. Indigenous engagement in health: lessons from Brazil, Chile, Australia and New Zealand.
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Ferdinand, Angeline, Lambert, Michelle, Trad, Leny, Pedrana, Leo, Paradies, Yin, and Kelaher, Margaret
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CONCEPTUAL structures ,MEDICAL needs assessment ,HEALTH policy ,MEDLINE ,NEEDS assessment ,ONLINE information services ,WORLD Wide Web ,HEALTH of indigenous peoples ,HUMAN services programs - Abstract
Background: Given the persistence of Indigenous health inequities across national contexts, many countries have adopted strategies to improve the health of Indigenous peoples. Governmental recognition of the unique health needs of Indigenous populations is necessary for the development of targeted programs and policies to achieve universal health coverage. At the same time, the participation of Indigenous peoples in decision-making and program and policy design helps to ensure that barriers to health services are appropriately addressed and promotes the rights of Indigenous peoples to self-determination. Due to similar patterns of Indigenous health and health determinants across borders, there have been calls for greater global collaboration in this field. However, most international studies on Indigenous health policy link Anglo-settler democracies (Canada, Australia, Aotearoa/New Zealand and the United States), despite these countries representing a small fraction of the world's Indigenous people. Aim: This paper examines national-level policy in Australia, Brazil, Chile and New Zealand in relation to governmental recognition of differential Indigenous health needs and engagement with Indigenous peoples in health. The paper aims to examine how Indigenous health needs and engagement are addressed in national policy frameworks within each of the countries in order to contribute to the understanding of how to develop pro-equity policies within national health care systems. Methods: For each country, a review was undertaken of national policies and legislation to support engagement with, and participation of, Indigenous peoples in the identification of their health needs, development of programs and policies to address these needs and which demonstrate governmental recognition of differential Indigenous health needs. Government websites were searched as well as the following databases: Google, OpenGrey, CAB Direct, PubMed, Web of Science and WorldCat. Findings: Each of the four countries have adopted international agreements regarding the engagement of Indigenous peoples in health. However, there is significant variation in the extent to which the principles laid out in these agreements are reflected in national policy, legislation and practice. Brazil and New Zealand both have established national policies to facilitate engagement. In contrast, national policy to enable engagement is relatively lacking in Australia and Chile. Australia, Brazil and New Zealand each have significant initiatives and policy structures in place to address Indigenous health. However, in Brazil this is not necessarily reflected in practice and although New Zealand has national policies these have been recently reported as insufficient and, in fact, may be contributing to health inequity for Māori. In comparison to the other three countries, Chile has relatively few national initiatives or policies in place to support Indigenous engagement or recognise the distinct health needs of Indigenous communities. Conclusions: The adoption of international policy frameworks forms an important step in ensuring that Indigenous peoples are able to participate in the formation and implementation of health policy and programs. However, without the relevant principles being reflected in national legislature, international agreements hold little weight. At the same time, while a national legislative framework facilitates the engagement of Indigenous peoples, such policy may not necessarily translate into practice. Developing multi-level approaches that improve cohesion between international policy, national policy and practice in Indigenous engagement in health is therefore vital. Given that each of the four countries demonstrate strengths and weaknesses across this causal chain, cross-country policy examination provides guidance on strengthening these links. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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13. Introducing critical Tiriti policy analysis through a retrospective review of the New Zealand Primary Health Care Strategy.
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Came, Heather, O'Sullivan, D, and McCreanor, T
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PRIMARY care ,POLICY analysis ,POLITICAL development ,LAND resource ,MAORI (New Zealand people) - Abstract
Background: Te Tiriti o Waitangi was negotiated between the British Crown and Indigenous Māori leaders of Aotearoa New Zealand in 1840. Māori understood the agreement as an affirmation of political authority and a guarantee of British protection of their lands and resources. The Crown understood it as a cession of sovereignty. The tension remains, though legal and political developments in the last 35 years, have established that the agreement places a mandatory obligation on the Crown to protect and promote Māori health. It also requires that Māori may exercise rangatiratanga, or responsibility and authority, in relation to health policy development and implementation. Methods: Te Tiriti is, then, an instrument against which health policy is justly and efficaciously evaluated. This paper introduces critical Tiriti analysis as such an evaluative method. Critical Tiriti analysis involves reviewing policy documents against the Preamble and the Articles of te Tiriti o Waitangi. The review process has five defined phases: (i) orientation; (ii) close reading; (iii) determination; (iv) strengthening practice and (v) Māori final word. Results: We present a working example of critical Tiriti analysis using the New Zealand Government's Primary Health Care Strategy published in 2001. This policy analysis found poor alignment with te Tiriti overall and the indicators of its implementation that we propose. Conclusion: This paper provides direction to policy makers wanting to improve Māori health outcomes and ensure Māori engagement, leadership and substantive authority in the policy process. It offers an approach to analysing policy that is simple to use and, inherently, a tool for advancing social justice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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14. Making sure the New Zealand border is not our Achilles heel: repeated cross-sectional COVID-19 surveys in primary care.
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Eggleton K, Bui N, and Goodyear-Smith F
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- COVID-19 transmission, Humans, New Zealand, SARS-CoV-2, Surveys and Questionnaires, Travel, Attitude of Health Personnel, COVID-19 prevention & control, Health Policy, Primary Health Care
- Abstract
Aim: Quick COVID-19 Surveys are an international collaboration designed to rapidly analyse and disseminate a primary care perspective on the pandemic and associated health response. In this paper we present results from surveys relating to opening the New Zealand border., Method: Three surveys were distributed to primary care practices between May and December 2020. A range of primary care member organisations distributed the survey augmented by snowballing. Quantitative data were analysed using descriptive statistics and qualitative data through an inductive process and grouped into themes., Results: Respondents became increasingly supportive of opening a trans-Tasman border but not internationally. Two broad themes were evident: (1) making sure that the border is not an Achilles heel and (2) effective strategies to reduce local transmission. These themes highlight primary care's concerns around management of the border and the management of local spread respectively., Conclusion: The results highlight concerns around border control from a primary care perspective. The border control issues raised by primary care have proven to be prophetic at times and reflect the role that primary care has as observers of society. The survey mechanism provides a template for rapidly eliciting a primary care voice for future health issues., Competing Interests: Nil.
- Published
- 2021
15. Developing the geographic classification for health, a rural‐urban classification for New Zealand health research and policy: A research protocol.
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Nixon, Garry, Whitehead, Jesse, Davie, Gabrielle, Fearnley, David, Crengle, Sue, de Graaf, Brandon, Smith, Michelle, Wakerman, John, and Lawrenson, Ross
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HEALTH policy ,EVALUATION of medical care ,HEALTH services accessibility ,RESEARCH methodology ,STAKEHOLDER analysis ,MORTALITY ,POPULATION geography ,HEALTH status indicators ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,HEALTH ,HOSPITAL care ,RURAL health ,URBAN health ,MEDICAL research - Abstract
Introduction: Rural‐urban health inequities, exacerbated by deprivation and ethnicity, have been clearly described in the international literature. To date, the same inequities have not been as clearly demonstrated in Aotearoa New Zealand despite the lower socioeconomic status and higher proportion of Māori living in rural towns. This is ascribed by many health practitioners, academics and other informed stakeholders to be the result of the definitions of 'rural' used to produce statistics. Aims: To outline a protocol to produce a 'fit‐for‐health purpose' rural‐urban classification for analysing national health data. The classification will be designed to determine the magnitude of health inequities that have been obscured by use of inappropriate rural‐urban taxonomies. Methods: This protocol paper outlines our proposed mixed‐methods approach to developing a novel Geographic Classification for Health. In phase 1, an agreed set of community attributes will be used to modify the new Statistics New Zealand Urban Accessibility Classification into a more appropriate classification of rurality for health contexts. The Geographic Classification for Health will then be further developed in an iterative process with stakeholders including rural health researchers and members of the National Rural Health Advisory Group, who have a comprehensive 'on the ground' understanding of Aotearoa New Zealand's rural communities and their attendant health services. This protocol also proposes validating the Geographic Classification for Health using general practice enrolment data. In phase 2, the resulting Geographic Classification for Health will be applied to routinely collected data from the Ministry of Health. This will enable current levels of rural‐urban inequity in health service access and outcomes to be accurately assessed and give an indication of the extent to which older classifications were masking inequities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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16. Lessons learnt from easing COVID-19 restrictions: an analysis of countries and regions in Asia Pacific and Europe.
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Han E, Tan MMJ, Turk E, Sridhar D, Leung GM, Shibuya K, Asgari N, Oh J, García-Basteiro AL, Hanefeld J, Cook AR, Hsu LY, Teo YY, Heymann D, Clark H, McKee M, and Legido-Quigley H
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- COVID-19, Commerce, Coronavirus Infections economics, Coronavirus Infections epidemiology, Europe, Asia, Eastern, Humans, New Zealand, Pandemics economics, Pneumonia, Viral economics, Pneumonia, Viral epidemiology, Communicable Disease Control economics, Communicable Disease Control legislation & jurisprudence, Coronavirus Infections prevention & control, Health Policy, Pandemics prevention & control, Pneumonia, Viral prevention & control
- Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic is an unprecedented global crisis. Many countries have implemented restrictions on population movement to slow the spread of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 and prevent health systems from becoming overwhelmed; some have instituted full or partial lockdowns. However, lockdowns and other extreme restrictions cannot be sustained for the long term in the hope that there will be an effective vaccine or treatment for COVID-19. Governments worldwide now face the common challenge of easing lockdowns and restrictions while balancing various health, social, and economic concerns. To facilitate cross-country learning, this Health Policy paper uses an adapted framework to examine the approaches taken by nine high-income countries and regions that have started to ease COVID-19 restrictions: five in the Asia Pacific region (ie, Hong Kong [Special Administrative Region], Japan, New Zealand, Singapore, and South Korea) and four in Europe (ie, Germany, Norway, Spain, and the UK). This comparative analysis presents important lessons to be learnt from the experiences of these countries and regions. Although the future of the virus is unknown at present, countries should continue to share their experiences, shield populations who are at risk, and suppress transmission to save lives., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2020
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17. Online alcohol delivery is associated with heavier drinking during the first New Zealand COVID‐19 pandemic restrictions.
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Huckle, Taisia, Parker, Karl, Romeo, Jose S., and Casswell, Sally
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COVID-19 pandemic ,LOCAL delivery services ,ALCOHOL drinking ,ALCOHOL ,HEALTH policy - Abstract
Introduction: This paper aimed to assess purchasing and drinking behaviour during the first COVID‐19 pandemic restrictions in New Zealand. Method: A convenience sample was collected via Facebook from 2173 New Zealanders 18+ years during pandemic restrictions April/May 2020. Measures included: the quantity typically consumed during a drinking occasion and heavier drinking (6+ drinks on a typical occasion) in the past week; place of purchase including online alcohol delivery. Descriptive statistics were generated, logistic and linear regression models predicted heavier drinking and typical occasion quantity, respectively. Weighting was not applied. Results: During pandemic restrictions, around 75% of respondents purchased from supermarkets, 40% used online alcohol delivery services (18% for the first time during COVID‐19). Purchasing online alcohol delivery during pandemic restrictions was associated with heavier drinking (75% higher odds) in the past week, while purchasing from supermarkets was not. About 58% of online purchasers under 25 reported no age checks. Sixteen percent of those purchasing online repeat ordered online to keep drinking after running out. Of respondents who had tried to buy alcohol and food online, 56% reported that alcohol was easier to get delivered than fresh food. Advertising for online alcohol delivery was seen by around 75% of the sample. Half of the sample reported drinking more alcohol during the restrictions. Discussion and Conclusions: Online alcohol delivery during the COVID‐19 pandemic restrictions was associated with heavier drinking in the past week. The rapid expansion of online alcohol delivery coupled with a lack of regulatory control requires public health policy attention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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18. Clinical governance: an assessment of New Zealand's approach and performance.
- Author
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Gauld, Robin and Horsburgh, Simon
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EVALUATION of human services programs ,ALLIED health personnel ,CLINICAL medicine ,COMMITMENT (Psychology) ,INTERVIEWING ,LEADERSHIP ,CASE studies ,MEDICAL personnel ,HEALTH policy ,MIDWIVES ,NURSES ,PHYSICIANS ,PUBLIC health ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,SURVEYS ,QUALITATIVE research ,ORGANIZATIONAL structure ,QUANTITATIVE research ,THEMATIC analysis ,HUMAN services programs ,ORGANIZATIONAL governance ,WORK experience (Employment) ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Purpose - Clinical governance policy initiatives have been introduced in many countries and health systems. How to assess development is an important question. The purpose of this paper is to describe and reflect upon the approach taken in New Zealand. Design/methodology/approach - New Zealand's clinical governance policy of 2009 and its implementation through its public health care system are outlined. The authors' assessments, in 2010 and 2012, of this policy are described and key findings summarised. Findings - The implementation of the policy was swift, with considerable commitment across the public health care system to this. The quantitative assessments found reasonable developmental progress between 2010 and 2012. Case studies undertaken in 2012 indicated various areas that policy makers should attend to or build upon in order to better support clinical governance development. Research limitations/implications - Key lessons from New Zealand's clinical governance experience, based on the assessments, include the need for: a well-defined definition of clinical governance; resource materials that can be used by those involved in clinical governance development; recognition that clinical governance development is complicated and takes time; and commitment to new leadership and organisational arrangements. Originality/value - This paper provides useful lessons for policy makers pursuing clinical governance development, derived from two rounds of assessment in New Zealand. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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19. Setting the stage: reviewing current knowledge on the health of New Zealand immigrants--an integrative review.
- Author
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Kanengoni, Blessing, Andajani-Sutjahjo, Sari, and Holroyd, Eleanor
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IMMIGRANTS ,HEALTH practitioners ,LITERATURE reviews ,TRADITIONAL farming ,COMMUNICABLE diseases - Abstract
The growth of migrant communities continues to rise globally, creating unique and complex health challenges. Literature on immigrant health in New Zealand (NZ) remains scant. This integrative literature review was conducted drawing on peerreviewed research articles on immigrant health in NZ published between 2012 and 2018. The objectives were to: (i) provide a critical overview of immigrant health in NZ; (ii) identify general trends in health research conducted in NZ on immigrants; (iii) compare, contrast, and evaluate the quality of the information; (iv) develop a summary of research results and; (v) identify priorities and recommendations for future research. A search yielded more than 130 articles with 28 articles constituting the foundation of the review. This review is timely following the rapid increase in the scale, speed, and spread of immigration and its potential for changing NZ's national health patterns and priorities. This integrative review led to the four primary conclusions. Firstly, migration in NZ is a gendered phenomenon, as there has been more women and girls arriving as migrants in NZ and being at risk of poor health in comparison with their male counterparts. Secondly, studies on infectious diseases take precedence over other health problems. Thirdly, research methodologies used to collect data may not be relevant to the cultural and traditional customs of the migrant populations. Furthermore, a number of research findings implemented have failed to meet the needs of NZ migrants. Lastly, policy initiatives are inclined more towards supporting health practitioners and lack a migrant centred approach. What is already known about this topic? Despite NZ becoming more ethnically and linguistically diverse, there is limited literature on the health of migrants living in NZ. What this paper adds? This integrative literature review provides a critical overview of refugee and migrant health in NZ through reviewing and critiquing the current literature available. This paper identifies research trends, the general health of migrants in NZ, recommendations that could inform future migrant and refugee health research and health policies and initiatives to ensure effective and relevant health service provision to migrants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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20. Being healthcare provider and retailer: perceiving and managing tensions in community pharmacy.
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Scahill, S. L., Tracey, M. S., Sayers, J. G., and Warren, L.
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BUSINESS ,COGNITION ,COMMUNITY health workers ,DRUGSTORES ,ENTREPRENEURSHIP ,INTERVIEWING ,JOB stress ,RESEARCH methodology ,HEALTH policy ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,PHARMACISTS ,STRESS management ,EMPLOYEES' workload ,JOB performance ,THEMATIC analysis ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Abstract: Background: Internationally, pharmaceutical policy has heightened expectations for community pharmacies to act as healthcare professionals, increasing the need to understand the health professional–retailer nexus. Literature suggests that pharmacy involves a dichotomy of roles including both retailing and healthcare provision, yet it is unknown whether pharmacists themselves perceive a tension between these roles and how such a tension might be managed. Aim: To explore whether there is tension between being retailers and healthcare providers in community pharmacy and to understand how any such tension is perceived and managed. Methods: Ten in‐depth semi‐structured interviews were conducted with pharmacist owners and managers of community pharmacies in New Zealand. General inductive thematic analysis was undertaken to gain insight from the data. Results: Pharmacists experienced tension between being healthcare providers and being retailers. In total, eight themes were derived from this study. Four themes emerged to describe the tension: (i) balancing roles; (ii) tension – what tension?; (iii) we give a lot for free; and (iv) too much bureaucracy and paperwork. Four themes for managing tension were identified: (i) imparting of owner beliefs; (ii) use of incentives; (iii) effective business management skills; and (iv) being entrepreneurial. Conclusion: This paper is expected to assist in helping policy‐makers and practitioners be aware of the role of tensions when policies are implemented to move pharmacists from a retailer role to healthcare provider. This paper aids in policy development and should inform professional practice and forthcoming business management training programs for community pharmacy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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21. Cultivating health policy capacity through network governance in New Zealand: learning from divergent stories of policy implementation.
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Tenbensel, Tim and Silwal, Pushkar Raj
- Subjects
NETWORK governance ,HEALTH policy ,INTERORGANIZATIONAL networks ,LOCAL history ,FOREST fires - Abstract
Wu, Howlett, and Ramesh's understanding of policy capacity has been used to identify generalizable strengths and weaknesses of specific jurisdictions and policy sectors such as health. In an extension of this work, Howlett and Ramesh have argued that the mode of governance of a policy sector accentuates the importance of specific elements of policy capacity. In this paper we focus on the implementation of the System Level Measures Framework (SLMF) in New Zealand that has been specifically focused on health systems improvement and which aimed to do so by fostering network governance at the local level. However, this policy is introduced in a context in which there has been significant contestation regarding which mode of governance--network or hierarchy--is dominant in New Zealand health policy. By exploring three divergent local cases of implementation of the SLMF we develop three arguments that contribute to the literature on policy capacity and health. Firstly, local histories of interorganizational play a crucial role in shaping health policy capacity. Secondly, it is crucially important to understand the dynamics and feedback loops between operational, political, and analytical policy capacity. Network and hierarchical governance are characterized by distinct and contrasting understandings of the content of policy capacity elements and of the way in which they are dynamically related. Thirdly, the key challenge in developing policy capacity compatible with network governance is how to facilitate this capacity when connections between operational, political, and analytical policy capacity fail to fire. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. New Zealand patients’ perceptions of chronic care delivery.
- Author
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Carryer, Jenny, Doolan-Noble, Fiona, Gauld, Robin, and Budge, Claire
- Subjects
DISEASE management ,HEALTH policy ,CONTINUUM of care ,INTEGRATED health care delivery ,LONG-term health care ,MEDICAL cooperation ,POPULATION geography ,RESEARCH ,RESPONSIBILITY ,GOVERNMENT aid ,PROFESSIONAL practice ,SECONDARY analysis ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Purpose – Care coordination for patients with chronic conditions is one aim of an integrated health care delivery system. The purpose of this paper is to compare findings from two separate New Zealand studies and discusses the implications of the results. Design/methodology/approach – The paper describes and discusses the use of Patient Assessment of Chronic Illness Care Measure in two different geographic areas of New Zealand and at different times. Findings – The studies suggest that, despite the time that has elapsed since government investment in care coordination for long-term conditions, there has been little change in the nature of service delivery from the patient perspective. Originality/value – The paper highlights the shortcomings of simply providing additional funding for care coordination, without built in accountabilities, no planned evaluation and no concerted focus on what the model of care should look like. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Exploring discursive barriers to sexual health and social justice in the New Zealand sexuality education curriculum.
- Author
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Garland-Levett, Sarah
- Subjects
BASIC education ,HEALTH policy ,CURRICULUM ,ETHNIC groups ,HETEROSEXUALITY ,CULTURAL pluralism ,SCHOOLS ,SEX education ,SOCIAL justice ,REPRODUCTIVE health ,CULTURAL values ,TEACHING methods ,BEHAVIORAL objectives (Education) ,EDUCATIONAL outcomes ,ATTITUDES toward sex - Abstract
Sexuality education is a compulsory part of The New Zealand Curriculum for state-funded schools. In 2015, the Ministry of Education has published an updated revision of their official guidelines for schools on the teaching of sexuality education. This paper employs Foucauldian discourse analysis to argue that this policy document, Sexuality Education: A Guide for Principals, Boards of Trustees, and Teachers, reflects and reproduces particular ways of knowing which constrain possibilities for socially just sexuality education. These discourses include the adoption of an intellectual approach to teaching sexuality, the mandate to measure learning objectives, and a narrow emphasis on positive sexuality. Intentions for the curriculum to deliver a holistic, socio-ecological vision of sexual health as well as one which embeds Māori values are undermined by dominant understandings of individual action which shape approaches to both sexuality and pedagogy. Furthermore, the liberal recognition of cultural, ethnic, sexual and gender diversity in the curriculum unintentionally reinscribes an unmarked white, secular, heterosexuality as the norm. This paper reflexively critiques the discursive tensions that inhibit the realisation of sexuality education in schools which meets the needs of diverse students and offers it as a possible site for social justice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. The theory and practice of integrative health care governance.
- Author
-
Gauld, Robin
- Subjects
HEALTH services administration ,INTEGRATED health care delivery ,EMPLOYEE participation in management ,RESEARCH methodology ,HEALTH policy ,THEORY-practice relationship ,CLINICAL governance - Abstract
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to outline the theory and practice of governance for integrated care, using the case of New Zealand’s healthcare alliances.Design/methodology/approach This is descriptive analysis.Findings Alliance governance provides considerable scope for bringing health professional together to focus on whole system approaches to care design. As such, it facilitates care integration.Research limitations/implications This is a descriptive review.Originality/value Descriptions of alliance governance in New Zealand and in general are rare in the literature. This paper fills this gap. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. The life cycle, achievements and transformation of the New Zealand Mental Health Commission: opportunities and risks.
- Author
-
McGeorge, Peter
- Subjects
HEALTH care reform ,HEALTH policy ,MENTAL health services ,POLICY sciences ,GOVERNMENT aid ,CHANGE management - Abstract
Purpose – The aim of the paper is to describe the "organisational lifecycle" of the New Zealand Mental Health Commission (NZ MHC) including factors that led to it being established, the evolving phases of the work it undertook and its key achievements, the critical success factors, the rationale behind its disestablishment and transfer of its core functions to another entity. Design/methodology/approach – The methodology is a review of relevant documents and interviews of previous Commissioners, and insights of the final two Chair Commissioners and authors. Findings – The NZ MHC was established to provide government with independent advice on how to develop the capacity and capability of mental health and addictions services for those people with the highest and most complex needs, estimated to be approximately 3 percent of the population. Having successfully led changes to achieve this goal as set out in The Blueprint of 1998 it is now influencing government policy and services to achieve better mental health and well-being for the whole population as per Blueprint II, published in 2012. The NZ Government clearly values the role of Mental Health Commissioner which has been transferred to the Office of the Health and Disability Commissioner from July 2012 at the time the Commission is disestablished. Research limitations/implications – The paper relies on insights of those in Commission leadership roles. Practical implications – Other Commissions may gain insight into their own evolutionary pathways and proactively manage them. Social implications – Optimal mental health and wellbeing for society requires policy that simultaneously takes a "whole of society" approach and focuses on responding to people with the highest needs. Originality/value – The paper shows that there are significant concerns about the disestablishment of the Mental Health Commission in New Zealand and little understanding of the underlying rationale for the organisational changes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. What we know about the actual implementation process of public physical activity policies: results from a scoping review.
- Author
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Forberger, Sarah, Reisch, Lucia A, Meshkovska, Biljana, Lobczowska, Karolina, Scheller, Daniel A, Wendt, Janine, Christianson, Lara, Frense, Jennifer, Steinacker, Jürgen M, Woods, Catherine B, Luszczynska, Aleksandra, and Zeeb, Hajo
- Subjects
HEALTH policy ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,CINAHL database ,STUDENT health ,DEVELOPED countries ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,PUBLIC health ,PHYSICAL activity ,EXERCISE ,LITERATURE reviews ,MEDLINE ,HEALTH promotion - Abstract
Background Physical inactivity rates have remained high worldwide since 2001. Public policies are an essential upstream lever to target individual physical activity (PA) behaviour. However, implementers have different strategies and face implementation challenges that are poorly understood. The present study analyzes the implementation processes of public policies to promote PA in terms of: (i) the policies covered and their legal quality, (ii) the actors and stakeholders involved in the implementation process and (iii) the used implementation strategies (vertical, horizontal or a mix). Methods A scoping review was systematically conducted (registered Open Science Framework: osf.io/7w84q/), searching 10 databases and grey literature until March 2022. Of the 7741 titles and abstracts identified initially, 10 studies were included. Results The current evidence includes high-income countries (USA, n = 7; UK, New Zealand and Oman, n = 1 each). Policy areas covered are education (school sector) and PA promotion in general (national PA plans or city-wide approaches). The legal classification ranges from laws (school sector) to coordination and budgeting to non-legally binding recommendations. The jurisdictions covered were federal (n = 4), state (n = 1), county (n = 1), school district (n = 1) and city (n = 3). Implementation strategies for city-wide approaches are characterized by a coordinated approach with vertical and horizontal integration; federal PA policies by a mix of implementation strategies; and the school sector by a strict horizontal top-down integration without the involvement of other actors. Conclusion Implementation strategies differ by policy field. Therefore, continuous evaluation of the implementation process is necessary to align policy implementation with policy goals to promote individual PA behaviour. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Healthcare in a carbon-constrained world.
- Author
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Charlesworth KE and Jamieson M
- Subjects
- Adult, Australia, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, New Zealand, Qualitative Research, United Kingdom, United States, Attitude of Health Personnel, Carbon Footprint, Delivery of Health Care organization & administration, Health Personnel psychology, Health Policy, Sustainable Development
- Abstract
Objective The climate crisis necessitates urgent decarbonisation. The health sector must address its large carbon footprint. In the present study, we sought healthcare thought leaders' views about a future environmentally sustainable health system. Methods The present study was a qualitative exploratory study consisting of semistructured, in-depth interviews with 15 healthcare thought leaders from Australia, the UK, the US and New Zealand. Audio recordings of the interviews were transcribed and analysed by matrix display and thematic analysis. Results Overall, healthcare thought leaders believe that to reduce the carbon footprint of healthcare we need to look beyond traditional 'green' initiatives towards a more fundamental and longer-term redesign. Five main themes and one 'key enabler' (information communication technology) were identified. In this paper we draw on other relevant findings, but chiefly focus on the fifth theme about reshaping the role of healthcare within society and using the size and influence of the health sector to leverage wider health, environmental and societal benefits. Conclusions These ideas represent potentially low-carbon models of care. The next step would be to pilot and measure the outcomes (health, environmental, financial) of these models. What is known about the topic? The health sector needs to reduce its large carbon footprint. Traditional 'green' initiatives, such as recycling and improving energy efficiency, are insufficient to achieve the scale of decarbonisation required. What does this paper add? Healthcare thought leaders surveyed in the present study suggested that we also consider other, non-traditional ways to achieve environmental sustainability. In this paper we discuss their ideas about adopting an anticipatory approach to healthcare using predictive analytics, and using the size and influence of the health sector to effect wider health and environmental benefits. What are the implications for practitioners? Achieving an environmentally sustainable healthcare system is likely to require broad and fundamental (i.e. transformational) change to the current service model. Health practitioners throughout the sector must be closely engaged in this process.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Successfully developing advanced practitioner roles: policy and practice mechanisms.
- Author
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Officer T, Cumming J, and McBride-Henry K
- Subjects
- Health Services Research, Humans, Interviews as Topic, New Zealand, Qualitative Research, Advanced Practice Nursing, Health Policy, Nurse's Role, Primary Health Care
- Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to lay out how advanced practitioner development occurs in New Zealand primary health care settings. The paper specifically focuses on mechanisms occurring across policy creation and in practice leading to successful role development., Design/methodology/approach: The authors applied a realist approach involving interviews, document review and field log observations to create refined theories explaining how successful development occurs., Findings: Three final mechanisms were found to influence successful advanced practitioner role development: engagement in planning and integrating roles; establishing opportunities as part of a well-defined career pathway; and championing role uptake and work to full scopes of practice., Research Limitations/implications: This research focuses on one snapshot in time only; it illustrates the importance of actively managing health workforce change. Future investigations should involve the continued and systematic evaluation of advanced practitioner development., Practical Implications: The successful development of advanced practitioner roles in a complex system necessitates recognising how to trigger mechanisms occurring at times well beyond their introduction., Social Implications: Potential candidates for new roles should expect roadblocks in their development journey. Successfully situating these roles into practice through having a sustainable and stable workforce supply provides patients with access to a wider range of services., Originality/value: This is the first time a realist evaluation has been undertaken, in New Zealand, of similar programmes operating across multiple sites. The paper brings insights into the process of developing new health programmes within an already established system.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. The role of Government policy in supporting nurse-led care in general practice in the United Kingdom, New Zealand and Australia: an adapted realist review.
- Author
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Hoare, Karen J., Mills, Jane, and Francis, Karen
- Subjects
CINAHL database ,CLINICAL medicine ,DATABASES ,FAMILY medicine ,FAMILY nursing ,HEALTH care reform ,HEALTH care teams ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,HEALTH policy ,NATIONAL health services ,MEDLINE ,NURSE practitioners ,NURSES ,NURSING practice ,PRIMARY health care ,PROFESSIONAL employee training ,QUALITY assurance ,WAGES ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,OCCUPATIONAL roles ,ORGANIZATIONAL governance - Abstract
hoare k.j., mills j. & francis k. (2011) The role of government policy in supporting nurse-led care in general practice in the United Kingdom, New Zealand and Australia: an adapted realist review. Journal of Advanced Nursing 68(5), 963-980. Abstract Aim. This article is a report on a review that examined the role of Government policy in primary care and its association with nurse-led care in the United Kingdom, New Zealand and Australia between 1998 and 2009. Background. The United Kingdom, New Zealand and Australia share a similar model of first point access to the healthcare system via general practitioners. General practice is synonymous with the term primary care. Data sources. Medline, CINAHL, EMBASE, Scopus, PsychInfo, Google, Department of Health, England (United Kingdom), Ministry of Health, New Zealand, Department of Health and Ageing, Australia. Searches of electronic databases from 1998 to December 2009 and hand searches of identified leads and key journals. Historical papers accessed to describe the genesis of practice nursing and historical Government policy documents prior to 1998, were examined. Review methods. A modified realist review was used to synthesize research and policy documents relating to government policies pertaining to nurse-led care. In addition, a systematic review was used to identify literature that described practice nurse-led care. Results. Nurse-led primary care services are well described in the United Kingdom with a total of 45 studies meeting the inclusion criteria for the second review. There are no published studies from New Zealand, and only two from Australia describing nurse-led primary care. Conclusion. New Zealand and Australia lag behind the United Kingdom in practice nurse development. Implementation of clinical governance was fundamental to the development of nurse-led care in the UK. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. The Dunedin Multidisciplinary Health and Development Study: oral health findings and their implications.
- Author
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Hong, Chuen Lin, Broadbent, Jonathan M., Thomson, W. Murray, and Poulton, Richie
- Subjects
ORAL hygiene ,HEALTH policy ,LONGITUDINAL method ,NATURAL history ,HEALTH equity ,ORAL history - Abstract
Longitudinal research is needed to better understand the natural history of oral conditions and long-term health and social outcomes. Oral health data has been collected periodically in the Dunedin Multidisciplinary Health and Development Study for over 40 years. To date, 70+ peer-review articles on the Study's oral health-related findings have been published, providing insight into the natural history of oral conditions, risk factors, impacts on quality of life, and disparities in oral health. Some of these report new findings, while others build upon the existing body of evidence. This paper provides an overview of these findings and reflects on their public health implications and policy utility in New Zealand. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Medicalizing the Disclosure of Mental Health: Transnational Perspectives of Ethical Workplace Policy Among Healthcare Workers.
- Author
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Rauch, Susan
- Subjects
MEDICALIZATION ,MENTAL health ,MENTAL health policy ,INDUSTRIAL hygiene ,HEALTH policy - Abstract
The disclosure of mental health conditions in the health‐care workplace is a global concern that presents many challenges during the prehiring and posthiring process. Even more concerning is the transnational variance in workforce policy that stigmatizes and marginalizes prospective employees who disclose mental health conditions, even those who are not substance abusers or addicts. In the United States, nurses who disclose mental health diagnoses are expected to enroll in substance abuse monitoring or peer assistant programs designed specifically for and mostly attended by addicts. Comparatively, global perspectives indicate that the (non)disclosure of mental health in the workplace is similarly stigmatized and medicalized, aka inappropriately labeled. This paper examines the medicalization of mental health workplace policy from a global perspective (United States, Australia, and New Zealand). Online narratives are presented as examples that question and criticize the social justice of medical workforce policies including the consequences of (non)disclosure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Editorial.
- Author
-
Mays, Nicholas and Black, Nick
- Subjects
EDITORIALS ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH policy ,MEDICAL societies - Abstract
In this article, the author deals with the papers presented at the Second Australia-New Zealand Health Services Research and Policy Conference that are published within the issue. The author welcomes the decision of the Health Services Association of Australia and New Zealand to adopt the "Journal of Health Services Research & Policy" as its official journal. The papers published within the issue focused on health services research and health service policy analysis.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. A case for examining the social context of frailty in later life.
- Author
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Barrett, Patrick
- Subjects
GERONTOLOGY ,SOCIAL context ,MEDICAL research ,HEALTH policy ,SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
This paper makes a case for examining late life frailty as a dynamic social phenomenon. There is increasing interest in the issue of late life frailty from biomedical researchers, but less so from researchers using the perspectives and methods of social gerontology given a concern that to focus on aspects of functional decline tacitly endorses negative views of ageing. This paper begins by introducing an example of the way frailty in older people is referred to in regional health policy initiatives in New Zealand, before discussing issues around the definition of frailty and its significance. It concludes by noting that, while the term frailty is problematic, social gerontology has a contribution to make in understanding processes of loss of capacity in later life and the social and institutional context within which that occurs, and thus has a contribution to make in policy planning and service delivery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Beyond New Zealand's Dual Health Reforms.
- Author
-
Gauld, Robin
- Subjects
HEALTH care reform ,SOCIAL policy ,PUBLIC welfare ,HEALTH policy ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
The New Zealand health system was substantially reformed in 1993 with the introduction of a purchaser-provider split, competitive contracting and managerialism. The new system failed to deliver the desired gains and, in 1996, the reforms were "reformed". While there has been widespread study of the 1993 reforms, there has been little discussion to date of the 1996 changes and the emerging directions for New Zealand health policy and service delivery, which remain unclear. This paper discusses the New Zealand health reforms of the 1990s. It briefly outlines the 1993 reforms and their results. Next, it details the 1996 "reforms". Third, it discusses developments since 1996, some of which have emerged out of the 1993 reforms, but which have gathered momentum only since the 1996 changes were announced. In the conclusion, the paper lists some of the directions in which the New Zealand health sector appears to be heading, noting that there is a need for coordination of the sector, and for permanence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Childhood obesity policies - mighty concerns, meek reactions.
- Author
-
Vallgårda S
- Subjects
- Canada, Child, Child Nutritional Physiological Phenomena, Diet, England, European Union, Exercise, Humans, Life Style, New Zealand, Nutrition Policy legislation & jurisprudence, Pediatric Obesity epidemiology, Social Responsibility, Health Policy legislation & jurisprudence, Pediatric Obesity prevention & control, World Health Organization
- Abstract
Background: The increasing number of children defined as overweight or obese is causing concern among politicians and health advocates; several countries have launched policies addressing the issue., Method: The paper presents an analysis of how the childhood obesity is defined, explained and suggested policies to address the problem from the WHO, the EU, Canada, England and New Zealand., Results: Considering the dramatic language used when describing childhood obesity, the proposed interventions are modest. Either the politicians do not consider the problem that great after all, or other concerns, such as the freedom of the food and drink industry and local authorities, are seen as more important. The causes identified are multiple and varied, including the physical and commercial environment, whereas the interventions primarily address the information level of the population, placing responsibility on the shoulders of the parents. Only the World Health Organization argues that statutory measures are required, and the English Government suggests one: a levy on sugary drinks. Otherwise, local authorities, schools and the industry are expected to act on a voluntary basis. Very little is explicitly substantiated by evidence, and the evidence cited is sometimes misinterpreted or disregarded., Conclusion: There is a discrepancy between how the problem of childhood obesity is presented as alarming and the modest measures suggested., (© 2017 World Obesity Federation.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Health policy: articulating the vision and how to get there.
- Author
-
Dovey, Susan
- Subjects
MALNUTRITION ,HEALTH policy ,SERIAL publications ,SEXUALLY transmitted diseases ,STRATEGIC planning ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
An introduction is presented in which the editor discusses articles in the issue on topics including Plan B group make an argument against lockdowns, and health policy.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Unravelling the whāriki of Crown Māori health infrastructure.
- Author
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Came H and Tudor K
- Subjects
- Humans, New Zealand, Health Planning legislation & jurisprudence, Health Policy legislation & jurisprudence, Health Services, Indigenous legislation & jurisprudence, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
- Abstract
New Zealand's central government, and more specifically the Ministry of Health, consistently acknowledges their special relationship with Māori and the strategic importance of Māori health, and certainly, strengthening Māori health is critical to addressing systemic health inequities. This paper, framed in terms of the Crown principles attributed to the Treaty of Waitangi, ie, participation, protection and partnership, examines three structural decisions that threaten to unravel the whāriki (foundational mat) of Crown Māori health policy infrastructure. These include the disestablishment of the Ministry of Health's policy team, Te Kete Hauora, revoking mandatory district health boards' (DHB) Māori health plans and reporting, and downscaling the requirements of DHBs to consult. These actions appear to breach the Articles of te Tiriti o Waitangi and may be cited as such in the forthcoming WAI 2575 kaupapa health hearing before the Waitangi Tribunal. The authors call for the Ministry of Health to embrace its Treaty obligations, and to protect and reinstate the whāriki of Māori health infrastructure., Competing Interests: Dr Came is co-chair of STIR: Stop Institutional Racism—this is a nationwide network of activist scholars and public health practitioners committed to eliminating institutional racism in the health sector.
- Published
- 2017
38. How do people who smoke perceive a tobacco retail outlet reduction policy in Aotearoa New Zealand? A qualitative analysis.
- Author
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DeMello, Anna Graham and Hoek, Janet
- Subjects
SMOKING prevention ,SMOKING cessation ,QUALITATIVE research ,RESEARCH funding ,SMOKING ,HEALTH policy ,INTERVIEWING ,SALES personnel ,METROPOLITAN areas - Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Enhancing mental health services through joint delivery with employment and other essential community services: early lessons from an innovative New Zealand program.
- Author
-
Nepe, Melanie, Pini, Tyron, and Waghorn, Geoff
- Subjects
MENTAL illness treatment ,SOCIAL stigma ,EVALUATION of human services programs ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,CHANGE ,CORPORATE culture ,FOCUS groups ,INTEGRATED health care delivery ,INTERVIEWING ,MAORI (New Zealand people) ,HEALTH policy ,MENTAL health personnel ,CULTURAL competence ,HUMAN services programs ,ORGANIZATIONAL goals ,PREVENTION - Abstract
Purpose - Clients often report reluctance in attending publicly funded mental health services, particularly when those services are provided at segregated and stand-alone locations well known to the wider community. One way to address this stigma-driven reluctance to attend appointments is to deliver mental health services in combination with employment services, education and training, income support, housing, disability support, legal services, and other health services, as an essential suite of community services. This paper aims to research this possibility.Design/methodology/approach - The paper outlines the early planning and implementation phases of the Huntly Community Link project.Findings - The paper finds that ongoing joint governance and management, clear on-site leadership, and an evaluation strategy are needed to ensure joint service delivery goals are attained.Practical implications - Several important practical issues emerge. For instance, differences in organisational culture take time to change towards greater support for the new joint service delivery goals.Social implications - Early indicators suggest that the Huntly Community highly values the joint delivery of these essential services from a suitable purpose designed building.Originality/value - This is an innovative New Zealand program that promises to reduce attendance stigma by nesting the delivery of publicly-funded mental health services among a broad mix of other essential community services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Are elected health boards an effective mechanism for public participation in health service governance? R Gauld Elected health boards and public participation.
- Author
-
Gauld, Robin
- Subjects
ELECTIONS ,HEALTH services administration ,INTERVIEWING ,HEALTH policy ,NATIONAL health services ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling ,PATIENT participation - Abstract
There is growing interest in the idea of elected members on health service governing boards as a means to induce public participation in planning and decision making, yet studies of elected boards are limited. Whether elected boards are an effective mechanism for public participation remains unclear. This article discusses the experiences of New Zealand where, since 2001, there have been three sets of elections for District Health Boards. Information on candidates and election results is presented along with data gathered via post-election voter surveys. The article also considers the broader regulatory context within which the elected boards must operate. The New Zealand experience illustrates that elected health boards may not be an effective mechanism for public participation. Voter turnout has declined since the inaugural elections of 2001, and non-voters form the majority. Reasons for not voting include failure to receive voting papers, a lack of interest, or no knowledge of elections. The elections have also failed to produce minority representation, while the capacity for elected members to represent their communities is subject to constraints. On the upside, elections have enabled public involvement in various dimensions of participation, including oversight and processes of governance. New Zealand's mixed performance suggests that elected boards may need to be complemented with other participatory channels, if increased public participation is the goal. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Health research policy: a case study of policy change in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health research.
- Author
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de la Barra, Sophia Leon, Redman, Sally, and Eades, Sandra
- Subjects
MEDICAL research ,HEALTH policy ,MEDICAL care of indigenous peoples ,TORRES Strait Islanders ,RESEARCH funding - Abstract
Background: There is considerable potential for health research to contribute to improved health services, programs, and outcomes; the policies of health research funding agencies are critical to achieving health gains from research. The need for research to better address health disparities in Indigenous people has been widely recognised. This paper: (i) describes the policy changes made by the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) from 1997 to 2002 to improve funding of Aboriginal health research (ii) examines catalysts for the policy changes (iii) describes the extent to which policy changes were followed by new models of research and (iv) outlines issues for Indigenous health policy in the future. Methods: This study had two parts: (i) semi-structured interviews were conducted over a four - month period with seven individuals who played a leading role in the policy changes at NHMRC during the period 1997-2002, to describe policy changes and to examine the catalysts for the changes; (ii) a case study was undertaken to evaluate projects by recipients of NHMRC People Support awards and NHMRC Capacity Building Grants in Population Health Research to examine the types of research being undertaken five years after the policy changes were implemented. The proposals of these researchers were assessed in terms of whether they reported intending to: evaluate interventions; engage Indigenous community members and organisations; and build research capacity among Indigenous people. Results: Seven policy changes over a period of five years were identified, including those to: establish an ethical approach to working with Indigenous people; increase the influence of Indigenous people within NHMRC; encourage priority research directed at improving Indigenous health; and recognise Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health research as a priority area including a commitment to an expenditure target of 5% of annual funds. Seven catalysts for this change were identified. These included: a perceived lack of effective response to the health needs of Indigenous people; a changed perception of the role of NHMRC in encouraging research to maximise health gains; and leadership within the organisation. The case study analysis demonstrated that 45% of all People Support recipients intend to engage Indigenous community members and organisations in consultation, 26% included an evaluation of an intervention and two (6.5%) were granted to an individual from an Indigenous background. Six of seven Population Health Capacity Building Grants that were awarded to study Indigenous health between 2004 and 2006 included an intervention component; these grants supported 34 researchers from Indigenous backgrounds. Conclusion: NHMRC made significant policy changes from 1997 to 2002 to better support Indigenous health as a result of external pressure and internal commitment. The policy changes have made some progress in supporting better research models particularly in improving engagement with Indigenous communities. However, there remains a need for further reform to optimise research outcomes for Indigenous people from research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. The Challenge of Suicide Prevention: An Overview of National Strategies.
- Author
-
Anderson, Martin and Jenkins, Rachel
- Subjects
SUICIDE prevention ,PUBLIC health ,EPIDEMIOLOGY - Abstract
Suicide is a global phenomenon. It is estimated that 0.5–1.2 million people worldwide die by suicide each year. Taking into account the global epidemiologic data concerning suicide and the economic impact of this phenomenon on diverse societies, this review aims to examine national suicide prevention strategies. Recognition of suicide as an international public health problem, increased reporting by countries on suicide rates to the WHO, and recognition of the costs (associated with suicide) to society have been crucial influences on the establishment of national strategies. Past reviews on national suicide prevention strategies highlight the fact that those countries with established national strategies share a number of themes relating to intervention. These are grounded in international guidance on suicide prevention and accepted epidemiologic and treatment-based research. This paper highlights comparative rates of suicide around the world, explores the economic implications of suicide and the nature of specific established national strategies for prevention. This paper highlights the urgency for the development of national suicide prevention strategies in all countries. Clearly, countries can learn from each other and integrate established, shared themes. It is argued that nations need to move towards nation-specified prevention strategies with effective structures for research, monitoring, and evaluation. This has been seen in countries such as Finland and New Zealand, where strategies have been effective in building inter-agency working and so benefiting different stake-holders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. The place of public inquiries in shaping New Zealand's national mental health policy 1858-1996.
- Author
-
Brunton, Warwick
- Subjects
MENTAL health policy ,HEALTH policy ,MENTAL health services ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Background: This paper discusses the role of public inquiries as an instrument of public policymaking in New Zealand, using mental health as a case study. The main part of the paper analyses the processes and outcomes of five general inquiries into the state of New Zealand's mental health services that were held between 1858 and 1996. Results: The membership, form, style and processes used by public inquiries have all changed over time in line with constitutional and social trends. So has the extent of public participation. The records of five inquiries provide periodic snapshots of a system bedevilled by long-standing problems such as unacceptable standards, under-resourcing, and poor co-ordination. Demands for an investigation no less than the reports and recommendations of public inquiries have been the catalyst of some important policy changes, if not immediately, then by creating a climate of opinion that supported later change. Inquiries played a significant role in establishing lunatic asylums, in shaping the structure of mental health legislation, establishing and maintaining a national mental health bureaucracy within the machinery of government, and in paving the way for deinstitutionalisation. Ministers and their departmental advisers have mediated this contribution. Conclusion: Public inquiries have helped shape New Zealand's mental health policy, both directly and indirectly, at different stages of evolution. In both its advisory and investigative forms, the public inquiry remains an important tool of public administration. The inquiry/cause and policy/effect relationship is not necessarily immediate but may facilitate changes in public opinion with corresponding policy outcomes long after any direct causal link could be determined. When considered from that long-term perspective, the five inquiries can be linked to several significant and long-term contributions to mental health policy in New Zealand. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Health care expenditure inertia in the OECD countries: a heterogeneous analysis.
- Author
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Okunade, Albert A., Suraratdecha, Chutima, Okunade, A A, and Suraratdecha, C
- Subjects
HEALTH policy ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL care costs ,ESTIMATION theory ,REGRESSION analysis ,ECONOMICS ,MEDICAL care cost statistics ,BENCHMARKING (Management) ,COMPARATIVE studies ,COST control ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,PROBABILITY theory ,RESEARCH ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,EVALUATION research ,PROPORTIONAL hazards models ,STATISTICAL models - Abstract
Health care expenditure studies of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) countries remain important because their findings often suggest cost containment and other policy initiatives. This paper focuses on the compatibility of OECD health data with the "expenditure inertia" (or lagged adjustments) hypothesis, by modeling individual country time-series data of 21 nations for the 1960-1993 period. Maximum likelihood estimates of the Box-Cox transformation regression models reveal that: (a) the hypothesized impact of health "expenditure inertia" is both pervasive and strong, averaging 0.64 across the countries; (b) the real GDP elasticities of health care expenditures vary widely among the countries and average 0.34 in the short run--implying that health care is a necessity; (c) the long run GDP elasticities are less than 1 in 8 countries, unitary elastic in 8 countries and elastic in 5 countries--suggesting that health care is not universally a necessity or a luxury commodity for the OECD countries; (d) physician-inducement effects (dis-inducement in a few countries) are weak, with a mean elasticity estimate of 0.17; and (e) no unique functional form approximation model is globally compatible with the data across the countries. Health care cost containment policy implications of these findings are explored. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Research and the health of indigenous populations in low- and middle-income countries.
- Author
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Mohindra, K. S.
- Subjects
HEALTH services accessibility ,HEALTH status indicators ,NATIVE Americans ,MEDICAL needs assessment ,HEALTH policy ,QUALITY assurance ,MEDICAL care of indigenous peoples ,HEALTH of indigenous peoples ,MIDDLE-income countries ,LOW-income countries - Abstract
In low- and middle-income countries (LMICs)--when there are available data--a 'health divide' exists between indigenous and non-indigenous populations living in the same society. Despite the limited available evidence suggesting that indigenous populations have high levels of health needs, there is scant research on indigenous health, especially in Africa, China and South Asia. Pursuing research, however, is clouded by the prior negative experiences that indigenous populations have had with researchers. In this paper, we describe the current evidence base on indigenous health in LMICs, propose practical strategies for undertaking future research, and conclude by describing how global health researchers can contribute to improving the health of indigenous populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. How do Policy and Institutional Settings Shape Opportunities for Community-Based Primary Health Care? A Comparison of Ontario, Québec and New Zealand.
- Author
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Tenbensel, Tim, Miller, Fiona, Breton, Mylaine, Couturier, Yves, Morton-Chang, Frances, Ashton, Toni, Sheridan, Nicolette, Peckham, Alexandra, Williams, A. Paul, Kenealy, Tim, and Wodchis, Walter
- Subjects
PRIMARY care ,CHRONIC diseases ,HEALTH policy ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
Community-based primary health care describes a model of service provision that is oriented to the population health needs and wants of service users and communities, and has particular relevance to supporting the growing proportion of the population with multiple chronic conditions. Internationally, aspirations for community-based primary health care have stimulated local initiatives and influenced the design of policy solutions. However, the ways in which these ideas and influences find their way into policy and practice is strongly mediated by policy settings and institutional legacies of particular jurisdictions. This paper seeks to compare the key institutional and policy features of Ontario, Québec and New Zealand that shape the 'space available' for models of community-based primary health care to take root and develop. Our analysis suggests that two key conditions are the integration of relevant health and social sector organisations, and the range of policy levers that are available and used by governments. New Zealand has the most favourable conditions, and Ontario the least favourable. All jurisdictions, however, share a crucial barrier, namely the 'barbed-wire fence' that separates funding of medical and 'non-medical' primary care services, and the clear interests primary care doctors have in maintaining this fence. Moves in the direction of system-wide community-based primary health care require a gradual dismantling of this fence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Implementing Community Based Primary Healthcare for Older Adults with Complex Needs in Quebec, Ontario and New-Zealand: Describing Nine Cases.
- Author
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Breton, Mylaine, Gray, Carolyn Steele, Sheridan, Nicolette, Shaw, Jay, Parsons, John, Wankah, Paul, Kenealy, Timothy, Baker, Ross, Belzile, Louise, Couturier, Yves, Denis, Jean-Louis, and Wodchis, Walter P.
- Subjects
PRIMARY care ,INTEGRATED health care delivery ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH policy - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to set the foundation for subsequent empirical studies of the "Implementing models of primary care for older adults with complex needs" project, by introducing and presenting a brief descriptive comparison of the nine case studies in Quebec, Ontario and New Zealand. Each case is described based on key dimensions of Rainbow model of Valentijn and al (2013) with a focus on "meso level" integration. Meso level integration is represented by organizational and professional elements of the Rainbow Model, which are of particular interest in our nine case studies. Each of the three cases in Ontario and three in New Zealand are different and described separately. In Quebec, a local health services network model is presented across the three cases studied with variations in the way it is implemented. The three cases selected in the three jurisdictions under study were not chosen to be representative of wider practice within each country, but rather represent interesting and unique models of communitybased primary healthcare integration. Similarities and variations in the integrated care models, context and dimension of integration offer insights regarding core component of integration of services, offering a foundational understanding of the cases on which future analysis will be based. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. The biopolitics of Māori biomass: towards a new epistemology for Māori health in Aotearoa/New Zealand.
- Author
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Warbrick, Isaac, Dickson, Andrew, Prince, Russell, and Heke, Ihirangi
- Subjects
PRACTICAL politics ,AUTONOMY (Psychology) ,BIOTIC communities ,BODY weight ,COMMUNITIES ,HEALTH promotion ,THEORY of knowledge ,MAORI (New Zealand people) ,CASE studies ,HEALTH policy ,OBESITY ,SELF-efficacy ,PUBLIC sector ,HEALTH of indigenous peoples ,RESIDENTIAL patterns - Abstract
In this paper we consider what impact a biopolitics that creates a compliant self-governing weight-focused population has had on Māori health in Aotearoa/New Zealand. We frame this discussion with three vignettes that in different ways demonstrate the deleterious effects of the individualisation of health on Māori. We argue that the current biopolitics is best explained as 'the health of Maoris' not 'Māori Health'. To counter this current biopolitics we put forward an alternative epistemology, the 'Atua Matua' framework. This epistemology pays respect to a Māori view of health that is holistic, encompassing physical, emotional, spiritual, cultural and familial well-being and does not give ground to the requirement for individualism so prevalent in neoliberalism. Finally, we consider what this new epistemology might offer to the public health agendas in Aotearoa and other countries where indigenous populations suffer ill health disproportionately. Thus, our implications have potential not only for Māori health but human health in general. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Progress, challenges and the need to set concrete goals in the global tobacco endgame.
- Author
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Bostic, Chris, Bianco, Eduardo, and Hefler, Marita
- Subjects
- *
SMOKING prevention , *HEALTH policy , *ELECTRONIC cigarettes , *HUMAN rights , *MANUFACTURING industries , *WORLD health , *PUBLIC health , *LEGAL status of sales personnel , *GOVERNMENT policy , *TOBACCO products , *SMOKING , *TOBACCO , *GOAL (Psychology) - Abstract
The tobacco endgame is rapidly moving from aspirational and theoretical toward a concrete and achievable goal and, in some cases, enacted policy. Endgame policies differ from traditional tobacco control measures by explicitly aiming to permanently end, rather than simply minimize, tobacco use. The purpose of this paper is to outline recent progress made in the tobacco endgame, its relationship to existing tobacco control policies, the challenges and how endgame planning can be adapted to different tobacco control contexts. Examples of implemented policies in three cities in the United States and national policies in the Netherlands and New Zealand are outlined, as well as recent endgame planning developments in Europe. Justifications for integrating endgame targets into tobacco control policy and the need to set concrete time frames are discussed, including planning for ending the sale of tobacco products. Tobacco endgame planning must consider the jurisdiction-specific tobacco control context, including the current prevalence of tobacco use, existing policies, implementation of the World Health Organization's Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, and public support. However, the current tobacco control context should not determine whether endgame planning should happen, but rather how and when different endgame approaches can occur. Potential challenges include legal challenges, the contested role of e-cigarettes and the tobacco industry's attempt to co-opt the rhetoric of smoke-free policies. While acknowledging the different views regarding e-cigarettes and other products, we argue for a contractionary approach to the tobacco product market. The tobacco control community should capitalize on the growing theoretical and empirical evidence, political will and public support for the tobacco endgame, and set concrete goals for finally ending the tobacco epidemic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Health economics and health policy: experiences from New Zealand.
- Author
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Cumming J
- Subjects
- Cost-Benefit Analysis economics, Cost-Benefit Analysis methods, Delivery of Health Care economics, Delivery of Health Care history, Delivery of Health Care methods, Health Care Reform economics, Health Care Reform history, Health Care Reform methods, Health Priorities economics, History, 20th Century, History, 21st Century, Humans, New Zealand, Policy Making, Economics, Health Policy economics
- Abstract
Health economics has had a significant impact on the New Zealand health system over the past 30 years. In this paper, I set out a framework for thinking about health economics, give some historical background to New Zealand and the New Zealand health system, and discuss examples of how health economics has influenced thinking about the organisation of the health sector and priority setting. I conclude the paper with overall observations about the role of health economics in health policy in New Zealand, also identifying where health economics has not made the contribution it could and where further influence might be beneficial.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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