Health New Zealand Surveys Information about maternity Health New Zealand is running two surveys for women and whānau that are about to begin: ● ●
Maternity Services Consumer Satisfaction Survey - intended for women/people who have recently given birth. Survey of bereaved women/whānau who have lost a pēpē/baby after 20 weeks of pregnancy and up to the 28th day following birth.
Focus groups and in-depth interviews will follow, with women/people, including those who have lost their baby/pēpē. Understanding whānau is essential, particularly as we make changes in the health system, and the results of these surveys will inform future policy work. This year’s survey of bereaved women/people will also provide insights into the development of a national bereavement care pathway. We have commissioned Research New Zealand to carry out this research on our behalf. In June, Research New Zealand will initially invite a small number of women/people to take part in the survey, any lessons learned will be applied to the survey process, and the full list of participants will be contacted from late July / early August.
About the surveys You can find key messages about the surveys below, along with background information. You can now also find content on the Ministry of Health website about the survey with detailed information to answer questions that women and whanau may have. https://www.health.govt.nz/our-work/life-stages/maternity-services/updates-work-maternityservices-sector#june2022
How you can help It’s possible that you or your teams may receive questions from women and whānau in your care. We’d be grateful if you could please support the survey by confirming to clients that this is a genuine survey from Health New Zealand, and that their contribution is important and can influence change. Please feel free to share the key messages provided below.
If you would like to share content on your channels You can help encourage people to participate by confirming the survey is genuine. We are particularly keen for survey participation among women and whānau who are Māori or Pacific Island, women/pregnant people with a disability and parents in the rainbow community. If you would like to help, you can use the key messages below and our website content on your channels, as you feel appropriate for your audiences, noting that participation is by invitation.