Centre for Health Systems, Department of Preventive and Social Medicine, University of Otago, P.O. Box 913, Dunedin 9010, New Zealand.
Health Policy. 2012 Jul;106(2):110-3. doi: 10.1016/j.healthpol.2012.03.018. Epub 2012 Apr 12.
The election of a centre-right government in 2008 has spawned a series of ongoing reforms to the structures for governing New Zealand's health system. These mainly involve creation of a series of new national agencies designed to stimulate national coordination and centralization of some planning and service delivery functions along with performance improvements in specific areas, namely quality, information technology, service efficiency, reduction of administrative costs, and comparative-effectiveness research. This brief article provides an overview of the post-2008 reforms. It notes that, while there appears to be agreement within the health system that the reforms are moving in the right direction, the new institutional arrangements are perhaps overly complicated.
2008 年中右翼政府的选举引发了一系列持续的改革,旨在调整新西兰卫生系统的治理结构。这些改革主要涉及创建一系列新的国家机构,旨在促进国家协调和集中管理某些规划和服务提供职能,并在特定领域提高绩效,即质量、信息技术、服务效率、降低行政成本和比较效益研究。本文简要概述了 2008 年后的改革。它指出,尽管卫生系统内部似乎一致认为改革正在朝着正确的方向发展,但新的体制安排可能过于复杂。