Dr Coleman

The Dom Post profiles Jonathan Coleman:

The new Health Minister may be confessing to a few “puffs” of cannabis in his youth, but don't expect him to go soft on drugs.

Jonathan Coleman has moved quickly to make changes since becoming the first trained doctor in the role in more than 70 years.

He has dumped the controversial cost-cutting agency Health Benefits Ltd (HBL), which his predecessor vigorously defended in the face of revolt among district health boards.

And he is also pushing a more aggressive shift of health services, and potentially funding, from hospitals and into medical centres.

But in other ways, Coleman will be toeing the political line. Anyone hoping that the former GP might take a more health-focused approach to use will be disappointed.

Coleman said he had smoked cannabis (although never “a whole spliff”) once or twice in his 20s.

As a GP, he had regularly treated drug addicts, including prescribing methadone, particularly while working in London.

“[But] my clinical experience has led me to the view that decriminalisation isn't going to work and the policy settings at the moment are the right ones . . . We need less marijuana in society, not more,” he said.

It will be interesting to see what happens in the US states that have legalised. Will legalisation lead to greater use, the same, or less?

Drugs aside, Coleman so far appears to have been given a cautious thumbs-up by the medical fraternity in his first months in the job.

He has spent much of his time in a hectic nationwide tour of all 20 district health boards, speaking to doctors, nurses, patients and administrators.

It was these talks that led him to dump HBL last month and shift responsibility for finding roughly $620 million in savings in the next four years to DHBs.

Association of Salaried Medical Specialists executive director Ian Powell said HBL was unpopular with doctors, had welcomed its demise.

“So far the signs are positive. He did surprise us in a pleasing way with the decision on HBL.”

In a speech at the association's conference last week, Coleman said DHBs should be running ideas past their senior doctors, a comment that went down well with the crowd of specialists.

But one of Coleman's biggest aims is moving patients out of hospitals, where they are being treated by medical specialists, and into the care of GPs and nurses in the medical centres, most of which are privately owned.

He said that rising rates of chronic disease such as diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, and obesity meant it was more effective, and cheaper, to act earlier, in the community.

would require a big shift in everything from monitoring diabetes to moving minor surgery from hospital to GPs and primary care nurses.

This is already happening in some DHBs.

“It's not a matter of cutting stuff in the hospital, it's a matter of moving things into the community and keeping people out of the hospital.”

A major aspect of this policy is obesity, where Coleman plans to use his other ministerial hat, sport and recreation, to encourage more people – particularly children – into physical activity.

However, he has ruled out more restrictive policies, such as the sugar being pushed by some public health experts as the most effective solution.

“We don't think taxes are an answer to this. We don't see any evidence that that works internationally.”

 

Good.

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