- Prime Minister Christopher Luxon has changed his position after saying 100 Uber-driving overseas doctors want to work as GPs.
- Health New Zealand is seeking interest from overseas doctors to boost the local primary care workforce.
- Christchurch GP Angus Chambers criticised Luxon鈥榮 comments, highlighting underfunding and retention as the key issues facing general practice.
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon has changed his position after claiming 100 Uber drivers who are overseas-trained doctors have registered their interest to work as general practitioners (GPs) in New Zealand.
After being asked by the Herald to provide the evidence he relied on to publicly state that 100 Uber drivers who were doctors wanted to work as GPs, he changed his position saying 鈥渟ome鈥 doctors were driving taxis.
Christchurch GP Angus Chambers, chair of the General Practitioners Owners鈥 Association, told the Herald Luxon鈥榮 comments were 鈥渦nhelpful鈥 and 鈥渃oncerning鈥.
During an interview about new funding for urgent care services on Monday, Luxon highlighted the policies the Government had in place to strengthen the GP workforce.
鈥淲e have got 100 overseas trained doctors that are driving Ubers today that are getting their registrations registered in NZ,鈥 he told RNZ.
Health NZ is currently seeking expressions of interest from overseas doctors for a policy change to make registering in NZ easier.
After receiving questions from the Herald, a spokeswoman for Luxon said 鈥渨ell in excess of 100鈥 overseas-trained doctors are in NZ doing work unrelated to their profession and 鈥渟ome鈥 are driving cabs.
It distracts from the real issue which is underfunding of general practice
- Angus Chambers
The Herald asked exactly how many foreign doctors driving Ubers had expressed interest, but Luxon鈥榮 office is yet to respond.
Chambers thought Luxon had been 鈥減oorly advised鈥 on the issue saying the core problem is years of underinvestment in general practice by consecutive governments.
鈥淚t distracts us from the real issue of underfunding of general practice,鈥 he said.
GPs have long argued the Government鈥檚 subsidising method is outdated 鈥 a concern backed up by several government reports, including the Sapere Report, commissioned by the last Labour Government.
As part of several measures announced in March, Health Minister Simeon Brown said he was 鈥渢aking action鈥 to boost GP numbers by creating 100 clinical placements for overseas-trained doctors to work in primary care.
The plan was met with scepticism by GPs - many of whom are burnt out, fully booked with patients and worried about finding time to supervise staff who don鈥榯 have experience working in general practice.
Angus Chambers is a specialist GP based in Christchurch and Chair of the General Practice Owners Association (GenPro). Photo / George Heard
Chambers told the Herald not all overseas doctors in NZ will have the appropriate training to work as a GP, and many won鈥榯 have any experience as a specialist general practitioner.
鈥淪ome will be ear, nose and throat doctors, gynaecologists - the whole gamut.鈥
He said while some jurisdictions like the United Kingdom had similar training to requirements in New Zealand, that wasn鈥榯 the case for all countries.
He described the plan to supervise the training of 100 overseas-trained doctors in local practices as a policy that 鈥渟ounds good鈥 publicly but would take a lot of work at a time when GPs are under increasing pressure.
鈥淚t鈥檚 certainly no magic pipeline that will see 100 GPs tomorrow seeing complex general practice patients,鈥 he said.
Chambers said retention was a key part of the issue with many newly trained GPs leaving for work overseas.
鈥淓ven if we do register these [overseas] doctors, there鈥檚 no guarantee they will stay because the policies [for GPs in NZ] are anti-retention.鈥
Michael Morrah is a senior investigative reporter/team leader at the Herald. He won News Journalist of the Year at the 2025 Voyager Media Awards and has twice been named reporter of the year at the NZ Television Awards. He has been a broadcast journalist for 20 years and joined the Herald鈥榮 video team in July 2024.
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