By Arshad Ali and Ehtasham Ghauri of
Photo: 123rf
When the former Labour-led government unveiled the Pae Ora (Healthy Futures) reforms in 2022, it billed them as the biggest shakeup of New Zealand's health system in a generation.
The sweeping overhaul promised to end chronic fragmentation and narrow postcode-based gaps in care, and to tackle long-standing health inequities.
Three years on - and with a change in government - what can we say that it delivered?
We explored this question in a soon-to-be-published analysis and found that the picture is mixed. While national co-ordination has improved crisis response and planning, everyday access to primary care - especially GP appointments - has become harder for many people.
The shift in political direction has also revealed a deeper lesson: structural reform can build capacity, but without durable political
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