Director general of health Ashley Bloomfield has resigned

Publish Date
Wednesday, 6 April 2022, 12:43PM

THANKS DADDY FOR YOUR SERVICE.

Director general of health Ashley Bloomfield will step down in July and is being lauded as a "true public servant" who worked tirelessly during the Covid-19 pandemic.

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern, posting on Instagram, said she hadn't gotten to know many public servants as well as Bloomfield.

"Through his tireless dedication, his focus on people, his calm and considered approach - he has been a true public servant," she said.

"He has been central to our Covid success as a nation, and he's done it with humour and grace (I'll keep the details of his sporadic mockery of me to myself!). When we spoke about his decision to move on, he mentioned that he wanted to spend time with his family, and that's the least we owe him," Ardern said.

Covid-19 Response Minister Chris Hipkins praised Bloomfield's work as a "calm, informative and reassuring figure" during the pandemic response.

"The amount of pressure he's absorbed, and the level of commitment he's shown over the past two years make that an easy decision to understand," Hipkins said on Instagram.

"We thank you Ashley for all you've done to keep us all safe. Give the man a beer, he's truly earned it!"

Bloomfield's message to Ministry of Health staff

"I've committed myself wholeheartedly to the role for nearly four years. The DG role is complex and challenging at any time and, with a one in 100 years pandemic, the last two years have been particularly challenging and intense," Bloomfield said in an email.

"I've done everything I set out to do when I came into the role. I would not have been able to do this without the support of many highly committed and talented people in the ministry and across the wider health system. The wider public service has done an outstanding job in helping lead the country through the Covid-19 pandemic and it's been a pleasure working with other public service leaders to help deliver the response."

He said with the changing nature of the pandemic, as well as the changes to the health sector with fewer DHBs, "it's a good time for me to step back and allow a new director- general to shape and lead the organisation in future".

"I'm confident the health sector and the Covid-19 response are in good hands, that NZ will continue to deliver a world-class response to the pandemic, and those leading the health system will plan and deliver the full range of care that New Zealanders need following the Omicron outbreak."

His focus on the next four months, he said, would be to ensure the ministry is well placed to take on its role well in the new health system, and that the systems and the people are in place to respond to the ongoing pandemic, including the challenges of the coming winter season.

"I'm looking forward to taking an extended break and spending time with family before deciding on what I will do next.

"Equally importantly, I'm still in the job for the next four months. We remain in the middle of a pandemic, we are assisting in the sector reorganisation and we're continuing with our vaccine programmes in the lead up to winter – so we'll continue the hard mahi for some time to come."

Article originally published in the NZ Herald and re-published here with permission and minor edits.

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