Ruth Hill
Orthopaedic surgeons offer relief for people on waiting lists
Orthopaedic surgeons are offering to replace some private patients with public ones which could provide relief for 2000 people waiting for operations.
However, clinicians say at least 500 people… Audio
Te Whatu Ora asks patients if they still want operations
Nearly 30,000 patients waiting for elective operations - including hip replacements, hernias and fixes for incontinence - are about to receive letters from Te Whatu Ora asking if they still need… Audio
Exhaustion, missed breaks, working while ill a reality at Gisborne Hospital unit
Exhausted, working while sick and injured, missing meal breaks and the constant fear of making a fatal mistake.
That's the daily reality inside Gisborne Hospital's acute care unit, according to… Audio
Vulnerable disabled people discharged "too soon", says care provider
Two severely disabled people in residential care were sent home from hospital still seriously ill, with one readmitted within 24 hours, later dying in hospital.
Disability advocates and families say… Audio
Dominion Post paper trims masthead to 'The Post'
After 116 years, the "dominion" masthead is disappearing from newstands in the capital.
The capital's last surviving daily paper The Dominion Post - started 21 years ago as a merger of The Dominion… Audio
Govt boosts science funding to prepare for more extreme weather
The government is putting money into science to tell it how many billions of dollars the country is going to have to spend to protect against the next weather event.
Research, Science and Innovation… Video, Audio
17,000 Wellington street lamps at risk of falling, council admits
Wellington City Council has admitted 17,000 street lamps across the city have the faulty adaptors prone to snapping and it's known about it since February.
A report to council shows 17 of the 11kg… Video, Audio
Privacy analysts worried about use of Google Analytics
Privacy experts and analysts warn government departments' use of Google Analytics may be allowing the world's biggest marketing company to harvest New Zealanders' private data.
Statistics New… Audio
Foreign-trained nurses using NZ registration to move to Australia
Some overseas-trained nurses are using their New Zealand registration to leapfrog straight into a job in Australia.
Meanwhile, health recruiters say Australia and Britain are getting increasingly… Audio
Aged care nurses near pay parity with hospitals, but GPs still short
From tomorrow, more than 8000 nurses working in aged care, hospices and other community providers will start getting pay rises of up to 15 percent.
That's going to bring them closer to pay parity… Video, Audio
Support network set up for religious community leavers
A group of people who have escaped "cult like" groups have set up a support network to help others trying to leave.
The Olive Leaf Network is offering information and practical help to ex-members of… Audio
Thousands of teachers strike for better conditions
School was out again today for 20,000 high school teachers - and their 280,000 students - with a second nationwide strike in less than a fortnight.
And they're warning there's more to come, unless… Audio
Malachi Subecz's family call for mandatory reporting
The family of murdered five-year-old Malachi Subecz - who died at the hands of his so-called caregiver - is determined his death won't be in vain.
His cousin and her father, who repeatedly tried to… Audio
Acute shortage of anaesthetic technicians makes patients wait
Thousands of patients nationally are waiting longer for operations because of an acute shortage of anaesthetic technicians.
It's been revealed that one in four planned operations at Christchurch… Audio
Lower Hutt family says its thousands out of pocket after slip
A Lower Hutt family says it is thousands of dollars out of pocket after a massive slip forced it from its home eight months ago.
Hutt City Council lifted the dangerous building notice this week - but… Audio
Please explain from Health Minister on inaccurate hospital data
Te Whatu Ora has apologised for sharing inaccurate data that has prompted a please explain from the Health Minister, who had used the figures to talk up a turnaround in Emergency Department visits.
… Audio
NZ authorities haul three tonnes of cocaine floating in Pacific
An enormous haul of cocaine floating in the middle of the Pacific Ocean has been seized by New Zealand agencies. The 3 tonnes worth of cocaine was made up of 81 bales. It's the equivalent of a year's… Audio
Wellington told to limit water after loss through leaky pipes
You'd think weathering one of the wettest winters on record and a soggy summer in the capital would mean there's plenty of water to go around - yet Wellingtonians are being told to cut back. What… Audio
NZ-made Covid-19 testing device approved by US but not here
A New Zealand-developed Covid-19 testing device has just won regulatory approval for use in the United States.
The device was developed by Auckland biotech company Ubiquitome in partnership with Yale… Audio
Bullying, harassment still rife at FENZ, three years since review
Three years after a damning report into workplace culture at fire stations and other parts of Fire and Emergency, a new review has found bullying and harassment are still rife. The board of Fire and… Audio