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Journal of Primary Health Care Journal of Primary Health Care Society
Journal of The Royal New Zealand College of General Practitioners
EDITORIAL (Open Access)

Rural health in Aotearoa New Zealand: current state and future challenges

Tim Stokes https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1127-1952 1 * , Felicity Goodyear-Smith https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6657-9401 2
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1 Department of General Practice and Rural Health, Dunedin School of Medicine, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.

2 Department of General Practice & Primary Health Care, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.

* Correspondence to: tim.stokes@otago.ac.nz

Journal of Primary Health Care 16(3) 225-227 https://doi.org/10.1071/HC24136
Submitted: 2 September 2024  Accepted: 4 September 2024  Published: 25 September 2024

© 2024 The Author(s) (or their employer(s)). Published by CSIRO Publishing on behalf of The Royal New Zealand College of General Practitioners. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-ND)

Just over a year ago Aotearoa New Zealand (NZ) launched its first ever Rural Health Strategy1 with a vision that all people living in rural communities should live long and healthy lives, supported by a health system that meets the varied needs of these communities and draws on the strengths and knowledge of rural communities to achieve pae ora – healthy futures for all.2 A major challenge, though, for the strategy’s implementation will be to ensure that it is driven by rural communities for rural communities, and not be led by urban voices. The elephant in the room is ‘geographical narcissism,’ where rural experience is both devalued and ‘othered’ by the urban world.3 Putting it in plain English: urban always knows best, and those living and working rurally feel they need to defer to their betters.

Both our two guest editorials use the concept of geographical narcissism to help understand and address the challenges facing rural health. Nixon4 addresses the current state and future direction of academic rural health. His argument is that successful academic rural health requires its practitioners to both practice and research in rural communities. He notes that we only need to look across the ditch to see the benefits that have accrued from Australian government investment in health professional education and research in rural and regional communities. He ends with a question: is it possible to properly deliver health professional education and research in rural NZ without first addressing funding models? Eggleton,5 in contrast, uses an urban norm-critical approach in his reframing of rural health inequities. He argues that this reframing requires a focus on urban privilege and power, the discourse of representation needs to be challenged – there is no ‘one’ rural voice – and that rural needs to be centred as ‘normal.’ Rural health also specifically features as a research paper in this issue. Ram and colleagues6 explored community views on the role of their rural hospital with a high Māori and Pacific population. A key finding was that the local contextual knowledge of rural hospital providers facilitates personalised, family-centred and culturally responsive care.

Rural health remains a priority for the current coalition government with the launch of a number of initiatives, notably a national rural telehealth service.7 It is therefore timely that Reid and Moerenhout8,9 have conducted two linked studies addressing how virtual consultation services, such as telehealth, can be assessed from an ethical perspective. In the first study,8 they conducted a scoping review of academic and policy documents to determine the core ethical challenges arising from virtual consultations. They then conducted a qualitative analysis to translate the main ethical themes and subthemes into a practical ethical checklist to assess virtual general practice services. In the second study,9 they applied the checklist to direct-to-consumer NZ virtual primary care consultation services. They conclude by highlighting that the application of this framework raises fundamental questions on how the core values of primary health care – continuity of care, equity, and comprehensive care – can be protected when virtual care becomes commonplace. In an accompanying letter to the editor,10 the Norwegian bioethicist Bjørn Hofmann points out that such checklists are very useful in identifying and addressing ethical issues with health technologies and services such as telehealth. Moving on from online consultations to online health information, Wells and colleagues11 surveyed adults attending cardiology outpatients regarding their internet use for health information, preferred format and what factors helped them to trust the source. They found that found that most participants had searched for online health information after visiting a health provider and often to check side-effects of medications.

Sexual health-related issues are broad in scope, as reflected by the three papers presented in this issue. Carroll and colleagues12 focus on the needs of transgender and non-binary young people who start gender-affirming hormone therapy in primary and secondary care. Ludlam and colleagues13 note that sexual orientation minorities have worse health outcomes than the heterosexual majority, but that it is not known if members of these minority groups wish to have their sexual orientation recorded on official databases. They sought to answer this question using a sample of gay and bisexual men and found that the majority of participants reported comfort with having their sexual orientation recorded confidentially on official databases. The perspectives of Māori and Pacific rangatahi on testing for sexually transmitted infections by an online service was explored by Rose and colleagues.14 They found that perceptions of online testing were mixed, and discussion about concerns outweighed perceived benefits. They conclude that for online testing to be an accessible alternative to clinic-based testing for priority populations barriers in the testing pathway need addressing, in particular cost and low awareness. Pacific voices are also the focus of Holt and colleagues’15 qualitative study exploring the worldviews, knowledge and beliefs held by Pacific peoples regarding hearing health. They conclude that Pacific peoples value the sense of hearing as it allows connection to their communities, environment, and ancestry. Hearing services can be more responsive to their needs by ensuring strong, trusting relationships are built between healthcare provider and families, ensuring physical access needs are met, and being more visible within the community setting.

The final research paper in this issue by Maddela and colleagues16 addresses the questions of who uses yoga, and who teaches yoga, in NZ. To date the answers to these questions in NZ are unknown, in contrast to other comparable countries. They found that yoga users in NZ are disproportionately NZ European, female, middle-aged and tertiary educated. They use yoga to help manage a range of long-term conditions. Likewise, most yoga instructors are female.

We regularly publish quality improvement reports and Theadom and colleagues17 present the implementation of a supported primary health care pathway for mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI), a very common condition in NZ. The pathway includes a decision support tool, funded follow-up appointments, clinician training and a patient education resource. They found that the pathway increased follow up of mTBI by health professionals and reduced the time interval between the accident occurring and assessment by concussion services. The issue is rounded off by a Cochrane Corner on whether SSRIs can help women suffering with PMS18 and Charms and Harms assesses milk thistle, a member of the daisy and sunflower family.19

Conflicts of interest

Tim Stokes and Felicity Goodyear-Smith are Editors in Chief of the Journal of Primary Health Care.

References

Ministry of Health. Rural Health Strategy. Wellington: Ministry of Health; 2023.

NZ Government. Pae Ora (Healthy Futures) Act 2022. Wellington; 2022. https://www.legislation.govt.nz/act/public/2022/0030/latest/lms575405.html

Fors M. Geographical narcissism in psychotherapy: countermapping urban assumptions about power, space, and time. Psychoanal Psychother 2018; 35(4): 446-53.
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Nixon G. Taken out of context: Academic rural health in Aotearoa New Zealand. J Prim Health Care 2024; 16(3): 228-229.
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Eggleton K. Reframing rural health inequities: a norm-critical approach. J Prim Health Care 2024; 16(3): 230-231.
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Ram S, Carlisle K, Larkins S, et al. Rural hospital contributions to community health: community perspectives from a New Zealand rural hospital. J Prim Health Care 2024; 16(3): 278-287.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

Eggleton K. A tool not a panacea: telehealth is overhyped as a solution to New Zealand’s rural health-care crisis. The Conversation, 7 August 2024. Available at https://theconversation.com/a-tool-not-a-panacea-telehealth-is-overhyped-as-a-solution-to-new-zealands-rural-health-care-crisis-236132

Reid M, Moerenhout T. Ethical assessment of virtual consultation services: scoping review and development of a practical ethical checklist. J Prim Health Care 2024; 16(3): 288-294.
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Reid M, Moerenhout T. Ethical assessment of virtual consultation services: application of a practical ethical checklist to direct-to-consumer services in Aotearoa New Zealand. J Prim Health Care 2024; 16(3): 295-300.
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10  Hofmann B. Checklists for assessing ethical aspects of health technologies and services. J Prim Health Care 2024; 16(3): 315-316.
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11  Wells S, Mahony F, Lee A, et al. Preferred format and strategies for seeking and trusting online health information: a survey of cardiology outpatient attendees across three New Zealand hospitals. J Prim Health Care 2024; 16(3): 270-277.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |

12  Carroll R, Rose SB, Ker A, et al. Priorities for data collection through a prospective cohort study on gender-affirming hormone therapy in Aotearoa New Zealand: community and clinical perspectives. J Prim Health Care 2024; 16(3): 301-307.
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13  Ludlam AH, Petousis-Harris H, Arroll B, et al. Comfort with having sexual orientation recorded on official databases among a community and online sample of gay and bisexual men in Aotearoa New Zealand. J Prim Health Care 2024; 16(3): 243-249.
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14  Rose SB, Gardiner T, Dunlop A, et al. Māori and Pacific young people’s perspectives on testing for sexually transmitted infections via an online service: a qualitative study. J Prim Health Care 2024; 16(3): 258-269.
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15  Holt EA-L, Koro L, Langridge F, et al. Worldviews of hearing health for Pacific peoples in Aotearoa New Zealand: a mixed methods study. J Prim Health Care 2024; 16(3): 250-257.
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16  Maddela S, Buetow S, Teh R, et al. Who uses yoga and why? Who teaches yoga? Insights from a national survey in New Zealand. J Prim Health Care 2024; 16(3): 232-242.
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17  Theadom A, Chua J, Sintmaartensdyk A, et al. A supported primary health pathway for mild traumatic brain injury quality improvement report. J Prim Health Care 2024; 16(3): 308-314.
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18  Jordan V. Can SSRIs help women suffering with PMS? J Prim Health Care 2024; 16(3): 317-318.
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19  Sharma R, Lee LE, Barnes J. Milk thistle. J Prim Health Care 2024; 16(3): 319-321.
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