When she did try to see a doctor, receptionists often warned Moses it could be weeks before the next available appointment. That wait time was now nudging a month.
After a subarachnoid haemorrhage, Moses now relied on regular doctor’s appointments to access the medicine she described as her lifeline.
“Even though that happened years ago, there is no cure for me, so I rely on going to the doctors, making sure I’ve got my medication,” she said.
“When I can’t get those on the weekend, I’m shaky.”
Moses became an expert at navigating the health system, and used her personal experience to help others who came to her for advice at Kawerau’s budget advisory service.
She stressed the importance of getting in to see the doctor as early as possible, and making sure prescriptions were filled long before medication ran out to avoid expensive trips out of town - Kawerau had no pharmacies open on the weekend.
However, she said when her clients were faced with such long wait times, it was frustrating enough to make many give up.
“As an individual, we think that we’re fit and able, that we’re not sick, so the delay is really in us not listening to our bodies and not going to see a doctor.
“If you ring up to say, ‘I’m not feeling well’, and you can’t get an appointment for two weeks, three weeks, then that puts you off.”
Secretary of Kawerau Grey Power Association Lyn Hughes said lengthy delays could make people reluctant to use health services altogether.
“Sometimes it’s really very hard - no, not sometimes, always very hard - to get an appointment.
“You might be phoning up and you might need to see somebody, and you’d love to see somebody tomorrow, but they will say, ‘our first appointment will be sometime in May’.”
A couple of months ago, Hughes was suffering from a painful swelling on her leg.
Before consulting a real doctor, she consulted “Dr Google”. A quick search came back with the suggestion she might have cellulitis and should get to a health professional as soon as possible.
“I thought, ‘I’ve got to go’, and so I rang the doctor, and the doctor went, ‘Oh, no, no, we won’t be able to, but maybe tomorrow we can triage you’.
“I said, ‘What are you talking about? I don’t even know what you mean’. And she said, ‘That means you’ll just get to see a nurse tomorrow morning’.
“And I said, ‘Oh, no, I can’t wait. I think I should go to the hospital’. So, she said, ‘Well, that might be a good alternative’. So, I went to the hospital.”
Thousands of people, but few doctors
Kawerau has two general practices to serve 8000 residents.
Tarawera Medical Centre, had five part-time doctors, but recently two resigned in the space of two months.
Practice manager Christine Yeoman said appointment availability depended on the urgency of a patient’s condition.
But for non-urgent patients, she said the wait time was about four weeks.
“Unfortunately, we don’t like doing it, but we do not have an alternative.”
Yeoman said nurses could reduce doctors’ workloads by triaging patients.
For urgent patients, the medical centre set aside appointment slots every day.
“All general practices are short of staff, short of doctors, so it’s not as if we can send them somewhere else,” Yeoman said. “We see patients if necessary. Anyone that has to get seen, gets seen.”
Yeoman was currently working through the immigration process for one doctor from England who was scheduled to join the team in October, while also recruiting for another.
She said it had never been this difficult to hire staff.
Yeoman said New Zealand simply needed more doctors to fill the gaps, but that was not going to be a quick fix.