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Ministry of Health (New Zealand)

Ministry of Health
Manatū Hauora
HealthNZ-logo.svg
Agency overview
Formed 1903
Jurisdiction New Zealand
Headquarters 1-3 The Terrace,
Wellington
WELLINGTON 6011
Employees 1,084 FTE staff
Annual budget Vote Health
Total budget for 2016/17
Increase$16,141,806,000
Ministers responsible
Agency executive
  • Chai Chuah,
    Chief Executive and Director-General of Health
Website health.govt.nz

The Ministry of Health (Māori: Manatū Hauora) is the public service department of New Zealand responsible for healthcare in New Zealand.

The Ministry in its current form came into existence in 1993.

The Department of Health was formed in 1903 by the merging of other government departments. Its structure remained relatively static even when the 1938 Social Security Act was passed where the New Zealand government took a larger role in health purchasing. The department remained actively involved in policy as opposed to purchasing.

By the 1970s problems had appeared in the health system. The high growth rate in hospital expenditure was occurring at a time when the economy was slowing down. Thus, the government was unable to sustain funding this growth.

This led the health system to undergo a series of changes over a 20-year period from the 1980s. During the 1990s the National government attempted to stream-line the system in a series of reforms such as separating the government purchasing and provision of health care services. During this time the department was renamed as the Ministry of Health.

The Labour-Alliance coalition government redefined the role of the Ministry of Health as part of Labour's election promises in the 1999 election.

The separate government health service purchasing entity, the Health Funding Authority, was merged with the Ministry of Health. Critics were anxious as to how the Ministry would perform as a funder, as they commented that the Ministry had in the past only performed as a policy organisation. However, supporters of this move stated that they believed this would make these agencies more accountable.

The Ministry of Health funds public health promotions such as smoking cessation and immunisation programmes, as part of the New Zealand Primary Health Strategy will move towards funding universal access to primary care services for New Zealand citizens. In 2003 the Ministry of Health began forming Primary Health Organisations in an effort to move health care services from fee-for-service arrangements to capitation funding for health professionals who are members of these organisations.


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