Whare Ora Maternity never had a chance: a study of Hunterville's fight for its maternity hospital
Authors
Date
1990
Type
Monograph
Fields of Research
Abstract
Fundamentally this report is a study of Hunterville's Whare Ora Maternity Hospital and its battle for survival over 40 years.
Over that period the Wanganui Hospital Board, and latterly the
Wanganui Area Health Board, were unrelenting in their efforts to
close the tiny hospital down and their fervour to do so was only
matched by the Hunterville community's effort and determination
to prevent the Board from achieving their aim.
To an outsider a community that fought to save a hospital that
delivered only 21 babies in 1988/89 was simply living in the past
and was extremely fortunate to have survived so long.
However, there were aspects of the battle for Whare Ora that are
relevant to many other, much larger, rural and suburban
peripheral hospitals. Out of the final battle for Whare Ora in
1989 there arise some very important questions of accountability
and democracy that have wide reaching implications for the whole
Health sector, as Board's grapple with restricted funding and
increased powers and responsibilities. The aim of this study is to promote discussion about the
present structure, financial capabilities and accountability of
area health boards and to consider if changes for the future are
necessary in the light of the Whare Ora example.
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