 Hello, welcome to New Zealand. I'm Alan Merry, I'm professor of anesthesiology and I'm head of the School of Medicine here at the University of Auckland. Tena koutou katoa. I'm Philippa Poole, I'm professor of medicine and a specialist in general medicine over the road at Auckland City Hospital. My name's Tim Tenbensel and I'm an associate professor in health policy at the University of Auckland. I'm Janet Fonslow and I focus on people's experience of violence and the long term health effects it has for people across the life course. Hi, my name's Helen and my research and teaching focus is vaccines and vaccination with respect to the New Zealand immunisation schedule. I've just had the pleasure of spending a month in Denmark at August University looking at my area of interest which is primary health care policy. New Zealand has a very good health care system but we do have a problem with equity particularly in relation to Maori and Pacific Island people and also increasingly in relation to children with growing concerns over the issue of child poverty. I'm passionate about growing the health workforce for New Zealand for 2030 and beyond. To make sure we have enough geriatricians, primary care doctors, palliative care specialists, psychiatrists, GPs and rural doctors. In New Zealand one of the things we're doing well at the moment is training the health workforce to do better identification, assessment and referral for victims of violence. In 2008 we introduced a vaccine against human papillomavirus and already we've seen dramatic declines in the associated disease. What we could do better on is perhaps extend the vaccine to our boys who are not gaining the advantage of this programme at the moment. What I'm really interested in is health policy, health systems and primary health care in particular, knowing how primary health care is a linchpin of the whole health system. We also need to make sure we value those careers as much as we would the high profile or acute care specialists that you see on television every day.