ASMS senior doctors’ 48-hour strike planned for 23 and 24 September 2025
Senior doctors and dentists at Health NZ public hospitals and health services plan to strike for 48 hours on Tuesday 23 September and Wednesday 24 September.
Emergency departments will be open for emergencies only.
GPs, after-hours and urgent care clinics, and other community health providers are not affected by the strikes and will continue to operate as normal.
Emergency departments treat people who have a serious illness or injury that needs urgent care. Find out when to visit an emergency department in Aotearoa New Zealand, the cost, and what happens when you arrive. Major emergency departments are open 24 hours a day, 365 days a year.
In any critical or life-threatening emergency call 111 for an ambulance. If you are near the hospital and the situation is serious but not life threatening, you may choose to get there without an ambulance.
This is for illnesses or injuries such as:
heavy bleeding
broken major bones
bad burns
chest pain
issues breathing or staying conscious
mental health emergencies
severe allergic reactions
injuries after an accident like a car crash.
Anyone in Aotearoa New Zealand can go to the emergency department of a hospital for urgent care.
Some people may be referred to an emergency department by their healthcare provider or the ambulance service.
When you arrive at an emergency department , a triage nurse or doctor will see you. They will assess your illness or injury, and decide how urgent it is and how soon you need treatment. This is called 'triage'.
You are treated in order of the seriousness of your condition. Life-threatening illness or injury will be treated immediately, and non-urgent injuries could be treated within a few hours.
Immediately life-threatening (for example, a heart attack).
Imminently life-threatening or important time-critical (for example, chest pain or severe shortness of breath).
Potentially life-threatening, potential adverse outcomes from delay, or severe discomfort or distress (for example, bad injuries or severe abdominal pain).
Potentially serious, or potential outcomes from delay, or significant complexity or severity, or discomfort or distress (for example, a fractured wrist).
Less urgent, or dealing with administrative issues (for example minor strains or sprains, which could be treated by your healthcare provider).
This process allows for the sickest and most urgent patients to be seen first.
Treatment for illness or injury
You will discuss your injury or illness with an emergency department staff member. Depending on your situation, you may need to take some medicines for your symptoms, or get tests like blood tests or an x-ray.
Once assessed and treated by emergency department staff, you may be:
admitted to the hospital to stay longer
transferred to another hospital
treated and discharged.
If your health issue is not urgent
If your injury or illness does not need immediate attention you will wait to be assessed and treated. Your name will be called when it is time.
You may have to wait for a few hours.
For non-urgent problems, it may be easier or faster to visit your healthcare provider, after hours duty doctor or clinic, or phone Healthline for free advice on 0800 611 116external link
Cost of visiting an emergency department
In Aotearoa Zealand, the government sets out who is eligible for funded health and disability services. People who meet the criteria for free or partly-funded healthcare, include:
New Zealand citizens and permanent residents
Australian citizens and permanent residents who have lived or intend to live in Aotearoa New Zealand for 2 years or more
some students and visa holders
refugees and protected persons
tamariki (children) of eligible people.
The full list of who is eligible for publicly funded healthcare is on the Health New Zealand website.