By Allied Health Admin
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December 10, 2025
As the election clock ticks down, Allied Health Aotearoa New Zealand is putting the needs, expertise, and potential of the allied health workforce squarely in front of our political decision-makers. AHANZ has developed a suite of four focused policy papers that together set out a simple message: allied health is essential to delivering a strong, equitable, community-based health system — and the next Government must enable that. Those policy papers - on joined-up community care, prevention, visibility, and reaching everyone, everywhere – are the backbone of AHANZ’s election advocacy. They now form the basis of a manifesto document that AHANZ will send to all the Parties, urging them to include our recommendations into their own health policies. AHANZ Executive Committee member, Alison Molloy, says the papers and the manifesto reflect what members have been telling AHANZ. “We have the workforce, the capability, and the evidence. What we’ve lacked is appropriate system design. These papers make that case clearly and powerfully.” 1. Joined-up, community-based care spells out how the allied health workforce can relieve pressure on GPs and hospitals, and why Tier 1 care must be team-based and locally delivered. 2. Prevention first highlights that preventable conditions are driving unsustainable demand. Allied health can address that, but people can’t access services that are unfunded and unaffordable. 3. Better information and visibility is AHANZ calling for proper reporting, shared digital systems, and visibility in workforce planning. 4. Reaching everyone, everywhere reinforces equity as the defining challenge. Alison puts it simply: “We understand this Government is mostly focused on health targets as they relate to hospitals and EDs. But we still need to advocate strongly for allied health and the role we can play, and the value we bring." We want to use every possible opportunity to push for a future where allied health is finally recognised as the engine room of a modern, accessible, prevention-centred health system.