Hospice Tairāwhiti warns of unsustainable palliative care funding crisis in Gisborne
Palliative care is the only medical specialty not fully publicly funded, and it relies heavily on fundraising and donations, says Hospice Tairāwhiti medical lead Dr Anna Meuli. Photo 123RF
- Palliative care services face a funding crisis, risking their ability to meet increasing demand.
- Dr Anna Meuli warns of a “postcode lottery” in care access if national advisory roles are cut.
- Referrals have increased by over 50% in eight years, but funding hasn’t kept pace.
A Gisborne doctor is concerned palliative care services will be unable keep up with a “tsunami” of need without a proportional funding increase.
A national funding crisis is making palliative care services unsustainable across New Zealand, according to Hospice Tairāwhiti medical lead Dr Anna Meuli and Society of Palliative Medicine Aotearoa chairwoman Dr Catherine D’Souza.
Meuli says staff also fear for the future of an already struggling palliative care system if a Government proposal to disestablish two national advisory roles goes ahead.

Meuli said the roles were established in 2022 to develop a model of care that would address a long-standing “postcode lottery”.
This “postcode” nature of palliative care had resulted in regions where “some Kiwis have access to in-patient, 24/7 specialist healthcare in their final months, while in other regions, others die without specialist support that would ensure a pain-free, peaceful and dignified death”, she said
“The National Palliative Care Work Programme is the first of its kind to bring together healthcare delivery and consumer sectors to ensure equitable access to palliative care across New Zealand,” Meuli said.
“The work is not expected to continue following restructuring, which would fold palliative care into a general primary care portfolio.
She said the restructure would “ignore the 30% of New Zealanders who die in hospital and the 30% of the population who die with hospice care, while also removing essential subject matter expertise.”
The cuts would ensure the “postcode lottery” would remain for Tairāwhiti.
Palliative care was the only medical specialty not fully publicly funded, and it relied heavily on fundraising and donations.