“This investment will bring healthcare closer to home for more people.”
The Budget would invest $164 million over four years into urgent and after-hours care nationwide.
Doocey said this meant that 98% of Kiwis could access these services “within one hour’s drive of their home”.
The funding includes targeted support for more than 70 rural and remote communities, including:
- Extended after-hours;
- 24/7 on-call in-person clinical support;
- Improved access to diagnostics and medicines.
Changes would be rolled out over the next two years to ensure services were tailored to the specific needs of each community.
This year, new services would be trialled in Twizel, Tākaka, Tūrangi, Te Kūiti, Coromandel, and Great Barrier Island before being rolled out nationwide.
Doocey said rural New Zealanders deserved access to timely, quality healthcare.
“This investment will reduce travel times, improve access to services, and help take pressure off our emergency departments.”
He said the investment would deliver practical improvements that made a real difference for people living in rural and remote areas.
“Geography shouldn’t be a barrier to getting the healthcare you need.”