Straight to Residence: 32 health roles added

Photo: Stuff.

The government is announcing 32 new health sector roles are to be added to the Straight to Residence pathway of the Green List to help prepare the health system for the coming winter.

Prime Minister Chris Hipkins made the announcement at his regular post-Cabinet press conference at the Beehive Theatrette this afternoon.

Forty health sector roles are being added to the pathway - eight of those were already on the Green List, but would have had to work for two years to attain residence in New Zealand, while the remaining 32 are newly added.

Speaking at a post-Cabinet meeting this after, Prime Minister Chris Hipkins says, despite progress in recruiting health workers and in lifting incomes for health workers including through pay equity changes, more work needed to be done to attract workers from overseas.

"It is vital that New Zealand's immigration settings are not seen as an unnecessary barrier to workers wanting to make a life here in New Zealand."

He says the changes announced today reflected the feedback from the health sector.

Hipkins says since the decision in December to put midwives and registered nurses on the straight-to-residence pathway, the goverment had received some 3600 health sector applications including 1400 nurses, 200 doctors and other specialists and 95 GPs.

"In the same period we've seen nearly 3000 health professionals arriving in the country."

"We know that moving countries is one of the biggest decisions anyone can make in their lives and in the lives of their families. With these changers the aim is to provide additional certainty when they're making these decisions that they'll be able to create a permanent home and a great life here in New Zealand."

He says the Green List changes would start to apply from 29 May, about seven weeks away.

The Green List was originally announced in May last year, with 85 hard-to-fill high-skill roles that provides a priority pathway to residency.

Added to Green List, straight-to-residence:

  • Addiction practitioner/alcohol & drug clinician
  • Audiometrist
  • Chiropractor
  • Clinical dental technician
  • Clinical physiologists (sleep, renal, exercise, respiratory, neurology, and cardiac)
  • Counsellor
  • Dental specialists
  • Dental technician
  • Dental therapist
  • Dentist
  • Dietician
  • Dispensing optician
  • Drug and alcohol counsellor
  • Enrolled nurse
  • Genetic counsellor
  • Medical laboratory pre-analytical technician
  • Medical resonance imaging technologist
  • Nuclear medicine technologist
  • Nurse practitioner
  • Optometrist
  • Oral health therapist
  • Orthotic and prosthetic technician
  • Orthotist/prosthetist
  • Osteopath
  • Paramedic/emergency medical technician
  • Perfusionist (cardiac)
  • Pharmacist
  • Physiotherapist
  • Play therapist (hospital)
  • Social worker
  • Speech language therapist
  • Sterile processing technician

Added to Straight to Residence list (previously Work to Residence):

  • Anaesthetic Technician
  • Audiologist
  • Medical imaging technologist
  • Medical laboratory technician
  • Medical radiation therapist
  • Occupational therapist.
  • Podiatrist
  • Sonographer

Covid-19 rules to remain

Cabinet has also decided to keep the few remaining Covid-19 restrictions, for now.

Most pandemic rules have been scrapped, but people still have to self-isolate for seven days if they test positive, and masks must be worn in hospitals in some circumstances.

Hipkins said these rules would remain in place for another two months when they will be be considered again.

He has asked for further advice about testing so people may not need to isolate for the full period before returning to work.

Researchers at Covid-19 Modelling Aotearoa this afternoon had said ending the mandatory isolation period could cause up to a 25 percent increase in hospitalisations and deaths within six months. But infection numbers would settle after that, they add.

3 comments

Asleep at the wheel

Posted on 11-04-2023 17:04 | By Kancho

Again so slow it act , seven years of pretending that the word crisis doesn't exist. Housing, crime, health, roading , the list is long of neglected top priorities ignored. The overspending and ideological nonsense. The bureaucracy huge growth that absorbed billions but no results. Talk but little delivery, can't keep blaming everyone a d everything for incompetence. They have created a huge mess of debt to be paid by the children. Dreadful financial management.


Another Failure

Posted on 11-04-2023 17:21 | By TheCameltoeKid

How can this Prime Minister even talk about our Health System when hen doesn't even know what a Woman actually is?


What about quality?

Posted on 12-04-2023 13:46 | By morepork

Leaving aside the fact that some of the things on this list are very arguable as to being critical, what about the quality of people presenting themselves? Can a Social Worker (for example) who has never lived in NZ REALLY understand our society and the subtleties of it? Can a doctor who graduated from an obscure third world University, REALLY meet the standards of Health Professionals here? Are there to be no basic standards of competence or "review by peers"? Or is it just that we are SO short we will take anyone, if they have a certificate? (Dunno why, but when I read this it reminded me of a John Bull printing kit I had when a kid, with which I printed myself a diploma as a Rocket Scientist...) I hope there are SOME checks in place.


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