This media release is in response to the New Zealand Herald story on September 2, 2024, titled “Healthcare crisis: Desperate patients queue from 6am at Ōtara clinic for doctor visits“.
Tuesday’s New Zealand Herald story about patients queueing at 6am outside a clinic in Ōtara highlighted the dire situation with health clinics in Aotearoa.
“We shouldn’t see queues like that anywhere, let alone in a supposedly developed country like New Zealand,” says Dr Buzz Burrell, interim chair of General Practitioners Aotearoa (GPA).
Health Minister Dr Shane Reti and the Government are not interested in making real change to recruit more general practitioners (GPs), Burrell says.
“If GPs had time to line up around the block outside Dr Reti’s office for treatment, we would. The primary healthcare system is sick. The concept of a family doctor is already dead.”
Patients all over the country have to wait weeks to see a doctor at their usual clinic, and even then they’re unlikely to see their regular doctor.
“Thank god we have walk-in clinics like Ōtara Local Doctors to pick up some of this burden. But those clinics are also being run ragged, and it’s still far too little,” Burrell says.
Because there are not enough GPs, it has become unsafe for those remaining as they try to see everyone who needs care.
“A patient in the Herald’s article said she could tell how stressed the clinic staff were. What you don’t know is those doctors probably spend a chunk of their spare time chasing referrals and test results,” Burrell says.
The Royal New Zealand College of General Practitioners this year published results of a study showing that every 4.5 hours of patient consultations generates 3.5 hours of follow-up work, often done unpaid in evenings and on weekends.
“They never get a break. They come to work unrested and having spent no time with their own families,” says Burrell.
“And if it’s unsafe for doctors, it’s unsafe for patients.”
The primary healthcare system is designed to prevent and manage illness in the community, and to treat minor illnesses that should never end up in hospital.
“We can’t prevent illness in these conditions,” says Burrell. “Those sick people are literally out in the cold.
“And we can’t properly manage existing illnesses when we don’t have space to see our patients.”
Burrell says more GPs will quit in the coming months, largely because they no longer feel like they can help their communities.
“How can you feel like you make a difference when you’re part of a conveyor belt for a queue that runs to the end of the block?”