
The sooner we get all Health planning and funding out of the hands of politicians the better. We need a plan that has consensus and a timeline that exceeds political terms. Health is too important to be politicised this way. Labour is now embarking on a half billion dollar restructure of the health system that National won’t support. It takes 5 years to train a fully qualified nurse and 8 years to train a junior doctor and that’s nowhere near creating specialists. It takes that long from budgeting some money to the money having a real effect. Health spending and plans have a 5 to 10 year time lag to them. To have safe hospitals a third of them need to be ripped down and built again. To improve primary care we need to find thousands of doctors. Edited by MisterTambourineMan on Jun 8th 2021 at 4:27:36 AM. Moreover, Mega Ten lacks one of Pokemons big draws for older players: a robust system for PvP play. To build an ICU bed you need to find 18 new staff to operate it. Yeah but were talking in My Hero Academia metaphors and Im insinuating that Palworld is the villain. But then he turned it back on Andrew Little saying that he’s had 5 years to ease the problems and now it’s his problem to own.Īs I see it, both parties and all New Zealanders need to own the problem and drive the answer because this is not a quick fix. National’s Shane Reti responded to that saying that he will own all the things that his party did right and did wrong over the 9 years they were in power. On Friday his office released a statement that said “The health system has been under serious pressure from years of neglect and underinvestment.” Meanwhile, Andrew Little continues to blame National for the sorry state of the health system. But the stories of brain bleed victims uncared for 8 hours who then die puts lie to that. The Health Minister maintains his line to maintain public confidence that we are coping. We’re understaffed, under resourced, underfunded and that people will die because of it. But now we have the victims of Covid added into the mix.įor weeks now we’ve had health workers saying it’s an emergency, that we’re at breaking point. Respiratory illnesses like flu and RSV overwhelm our hospitals. Tomorrow is the Winter solstice and the official start of deepest winter.įor a long time now this has meant a crunch time for our health system. It’s a vicious cycle.Īnd one of the most immediate crises is in the health sector.
Palworld system full#
The world is full of bear markets crashing around us with the exception of crude oil prices that are up 6 per cent in the past month fuelling on more inflation. Having spent 2 years being ravaged by a pandemic we have entered an age of inflation and economic uncertainty. We live in a world beset by problems right now.
