Stories by Ruth Hill
News
'Our hearts are shattered': Baby Ru's whānau haven't heard from police in months
Five months on from the boy's death, no one has been charged and his family says the police updates have stopped coming.
Mental health: When a pamphlet or helpline is not enough
"Not sick enough to get help" - That's the message many people struggling with debilitating depression and other mental problems are getting from the health system.
Survivors doubt mental health system can step up
People who have suffered acute mental breakdowns fear the health system will not be ready to fill the gap when police withdraw from crisis callouts.
Funding continues for children with cancer, but others left out
Pharmac announced it will continue blanket funding for all child cancer medicines but will not extend the funding to other medicines for children.
Too sick to enrol? Woman struggles to find GP
A chronically-ill woman suspects some doctors are reluctant to enrol her, as new research shows some clinics to cherry-pick healthy patients.
How GP clinics are picking and choosing patients
About half of all clinics are "cream-skimming" patients to enrol, new research has found.
Woman who miscarried not warned baby would be born alive
Maya says she has been left traumatised by the indifferent care she received: "They treated me like I wasn't worth their time because my baby was going to die."
Cancer patients left waiting for months for bone marrow transplants
Cancer patients who should have bone marrow transplants within four weeks are waiting for four months - or longer - because services are overloaded.
'Sorely understaffed' south's cancer patients still waiting too long
The Health and Disability Commissioner says until oncology workforces are brought up to a viable level there's no guarantee patients will be treated within "appropriate timeframes".
St John pulls ambulances off road to rein in costs
The ambulance workers' union says it's "unacceptable" cost-cutting is putting lives at risk.
Safety advocate 'horrified' at plans to drop Therapeutic Products Act
Scrapping the act will leave thousands exposed to dodgy medical devices, warn experts.
'The state is not intervening' - Calls for Oranga Tamariki mental health training
Advocates for children and youth in care are calling for mental health training for all Oranga Tamariki caregivers in the wake of the Auditor-General's report this week.
Warning over police plan to pull back from mental heath callouts
It's unclear which agencies would be able to step into the gap, The Mental Health Foundation says.
Musicians and crew left hanging after music festival collapses
The company behind a Hawke's Bay music festival has collapsed, leaving dozens of musicians and crew thousands of dollars out of pocket.
Taranaki GP practice network embracing physician associates
Physician associates work under the supervision of a doctor, but see patients independently.
'He could have gone blind': Concerns unregulated 'physician associates' may put patients at risk
Overseas-trained "PAs" are being recruited to plug the gaps left by chronic doctor shortages, despite being unregulated here. Audio
Miscarriage survivor slams health system: 'No one could help me'
More lives are lost to miscarriages under 20 weeks than deaths on the roads, yet services for affected whānau are fragmented around the country.
'A sign from the universe': Covid prompts woman to heed nursing's call
Victoria Congalton gave up a high-flying career to retrain as a nurse at the start of the pandemic.
Te Whatu Ora owes health professionals more than $3b for leave and holiday pay
Thousands of health professionals are owed billions of dollars for incorrectly calculated holiday pay and untaken annual leave, according to Te Whatu Ora's first annual report.
'Terrible pressure' - Senior doctors forced to take on junior doctor shifts
Senior doctors are being forced to pick up junior doctors' shifts on top of their own work, as hospitals grapple with hundreds of vacancies.
New separate pandemic inquiry may undermine ongoing Royal Commission
The new coalition government has decided to open an independent inquiry into the pandemic response but a legal expert warns it's not a good look.
Te Whatu Ora paid four consultancy firms $82m in first 16 months
However, it has also cut more than $100m off its consultant costs since inheriting more than $500m in contracts from the old DHBs.
'Toxic relationship': The jobs nurses are doing instead of nursing
Nearly half the country's nurses are not working as nurses, with some even taking jobs in supermarkets or on road gangs.
Bonding scheme 'too late' for nurse and midwifery students dropping out now
Te Whatu Ora's beefed up Voluntary Bonding Scheme for new graduates will not stop people dropping out before they even qualify, nurses and midwives warn.
'Continuity is key': How getting a regular GP could help life expectancy
Leading family doctors warn some people are not getting the care they need - or even having their lives cut short - because they cannot find a regular GP.