Story: Colonial and provincial government

Southern District Health Board meeting, May 2010

Southern District Health Board meeting, May 2010

The Hospitals and Charitable Institutions Act 1885 established 28 hospital districts to take responsibility for this aspect of state activity, which had been carried out with varying degrees of effectiveness by the provinces. Board members were elected by the county and borough councils within each district, and funds came from local sources and central government grants. The 20 district health boards of the 2010s were the successors to those districts. Some of their members were directly elected by voters, and most of their funding came from central government. The Southland and Otago district health boards merged as the Southern District Health Board, which held its inaugural meeting, shown here, in May 2010. In 2022 the district health boards were replaced by Te Whatu Ora Health New Zealand and Te Aka Whai Ora Māori Health Authority.

Using this item

Otago Daily Times
Reference: 7 May 2010
Photograph by Robert Landreth

Permission of the Otago Daily Times must be obtained before any re-use of this image.

All images & media in this story

How to cite this page:

Malcolm McKinnon, 'Colonial and provincial government - After abolition', Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand, http://www.TeAra.govt.nz/en/photograph/35497/southern-district-health-board-meeting-may-2010 (accessed 12 May 2024)

Story by Malcolm McKinnon, published 20 Jun 2012, reviewed & revised 6 Oct 2023