First, he was a doctor, then a 鈥渟aint鈥, and now the country鈥檚 most famous public servant is to become 鈥淪ir鈥.
Dr Ashley Bloomfield in his former role as Director-General of Health became a household name - and face - running the Covid-19 pandemic response.
He fronted more than 300 press conferences and was tasked with providing advice on a range of unprecedented and previously inconceivable measures including lockdowns, border closures, and vaccine mandates.
Dr Ashley Bloomfield is now Sir Ashley. Photo / Marty Melville
They were decisions loved and loathed, but that ultimately saw New Zealand achieve one of the best health responses in the world, with still one of the lowest death rates.
For these services to public health, Bloomfield is to be made a knight companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit as part of the New Year 2023 Honours.
Not an 鈥榚asy鈥 decision for humble doctor
It was not, as perhaps expected from someone famed for their humility, an easy decision to accept for Bloomfield and his family, especially as a public servant.
And ultimately the reason for accepting is probably also somewhat expected, Bloomfield crediting the 鈥渢eam effort鈥 and 鈥渉uge sacrifices鈥 made across the country over the past few years.
聽鈥淚 had to double take when the email came through,鈥 Bloomfield tells the聽Herald聽in a sit-down interview.
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鈥淚t鈥檚 a huge honour. My family are thrilled, but also in many respects, nothing changes - I鈥檓 still the same person.鈥
Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern and then Director-General of Health Dr Ashley Bloomfield during one of the many press conferences they fronted together. Photo / Mark Mitchell
His proudest moment of the past few years was the 鈥渋mmense contribution鈥 made by 鈥渁ll Kiwis鈥.
鈥淚t required a huge number of sacrifices by many people.
鈥淧eople whose families were split apart because they were overseas. People were isolated from their family, friends, and asked to do quite extraordinary things, but they did it.
鈥淎nd of course... the reason we can effectively go about our lives as if it were pre-pandemic, is the success of our vaccination programme.
鈥淚 look back at that with a sense of pride, in what we achieved as a country.鈥
鈥楰ia ora koutou katoa鈥
Bloomfield was born in Napier but spent most of his childhood in Wellington. He became Director-General of Health in 2018, after previously working in various public health roles in New Zealand and overseas.
叠濒辞辞尘蹿颈别濒诲听, almost a year before his five-year term was due to end in June 2023.
While he鈥檚 always had a calm demeanour, it is clear the past five months off have been good to him, aside from a broken thumb endured during one of his favourite pastimes, mountain biking (the injury also, unfortunately, took out his other outdoor pursuit,聽).
Staff formed a guard of honour for former Director-General of Health Dr Ashley Bloomfield on his last day at the Ministry of Health in Wellington. Photo / Mark Mitchell
He said he鈥檇 spent much of that time catching up with family and friends and, since the injury, reading - fittingly immersed in the 鈥渉istory of disinformation鈥.
Bloomfield made his first appearance during the pandemic on January 30, 2020, to discuss what was then a 鈥渘ovel coronavirus鈥.
鈥淜ia ora koutou katoa,鈥 he said - a phrase that would become synonymous with probably the聽.
Dr Ashley Bloomfield steps down: All his greatest TV moments. Video / NZ Herald
He worked closely with and stood alongside Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern, who has said of him: 鈥淚 cannot imagine someone who is a better example of what being a true public servant is.鈥
Since then his near-daily presence led to an infatuation never before seen for an unelected official, with his face adorning T-shirts and tea towels, countless memes, songs and even a brand of hot sauce as 鈥淪aint Ashley鈥.
Former Director-General of Health Dr Ashley Bloomfield, pictured with fan Dakta Green, has become a cult figure for some Kiwis. Photo / Mike Scott
As Covid ripped around the world, with millions of people dying, New Zealand took the, until then, unimaginable steps of locking down both the external border and then within our own communities, shutting us off physically from family and friends, workplaces and communities.
It was a time when no vaccine existed, nor any of the remarkably effective antiviral medications, and the efficacy of mask use was still ill-defined.
It was also the time of the most deadly of variants.
The strategy, in the beginning, appeared to work, and as the rest of the world not only dealt with horrific death tolls they too ended up enduring far more restrictive lockdowns than here, where for the first summer at least, it was like there was no pandemic at all.
It was not obviously all plain sailing, as New Zealanders of all stripes can attest.
Dr Ashley Bloomfield made a guest appearance at Rhythm and Vines 2020 on the big screen. Photo / Supplied
There was domestic criticism, from businesses over the economic impacts of lockdowns to medical experts and iwi and community leaders arguing measures were not strict enough.
There was political flak over the speed of everything from procurement of PPE to vaccines to antivirals and from iwi for not partnering in the response.
The border closure, while initially well-supported eventually led to many Kiwis - and migrant families - being effectively locked out of their home country for years, which the聽聽placed 鈥渦njustified limits鈥 on human rights.
And perhaps most controversial, the vaccine mandates, which led to聽聽and the聽, both from those caught up in聽聽and others who simply felt it was a step too far for a government to take.
The first fire on Parliament grounds as police sought to evict protesters during the anti-Covid mandate occupation in February. Photo / Michael Neilson
鈥楾he vast majority of Kiwis did, and do still support that鈥
With six months out of the job and the benefit of hindsight, Bloomfield remains adamant he would not have done anything differently in terms of the advice given.
鈥淯ntil we had high vaccination rates [elimination] was the right thing to do.
鈥淚f you look at all the countries that have been successful in protecting their populations, and their social and economic wellbeing to the greatest extent possible, they are ones who took a similar approach to New Zealand.鈥
He points to England, which not only had one of the highest death rates in the world but also had to endure some of the world鈥檚 most brutal lockdowns to get the virus back under control.
Bloomfield is also adamant the strategy had high public support.
鈥淭hat carried through to the vaccination programme, while there was a lot of focus on people who were deeply opposed to the vaccine, over 90 per cent of Kiwis from all walks of life, went out and got two vaccines.
鈥淭here are people who feel there were missteps or that it was the wrong thing to require mask use, to require some people to be vaccinated, even to institute lockdowns.
鈥淏ut my overall impression is that the vast majority of Kiwis did, and do still support that.鈥
Former Director-General of Health Dr Ashley Bloomfield. Photo / Mark Mitchell
On the protests and perceived rise of disinformation, Bloomfield is also hesitant to give it too much weight.
鈥淭he issue is not necessarily Covid. I think there鈥檚 a broader issue around trust and government.
鈥淎nd in fact, if you look at surveys of trust in government, New Zealand has a high level of trust compared with many other countries.
鈥淎nd that wasn鈥檛 just maintained, but it was strengthened through the pandemic. I think that speaks volumes.鈥
With Covid cases now ramping up again and hospitalisations looking to hit a new high, some have been questioning if the pain of the early days of the pandemic was worth it. There was also the risk of new variants emerging as China abandons its zero-Covid strategy.
Bloomfield said he understood the sentiment, but the situation now was entirely different.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 blame people for sort of forgetting because, in many respects, it feels a bit surreal [what we went through].
鈥淲e quite quickly move on, don鈥檛 we, as humans?
鈥淏ut while we鈥檝e got the virus out on the community, it is at a level where it鈥檚 having much less impact than it would have two years ago, because of our high vaccination rates, because we have effective treatments, and because the variant is less harmful than the earlier ones.鈥
Lessons to be learned
Bloomfield said there were many lessons to learn from the pandemic response and he welcomed the聽.
鈥淲e need to be even better prepared next time and also learn what we can take from our Covid response into other areas of government.鈥
Michael Neilson sits down with outgoing Director-General of the Ministry of Health Dr Ashley Bloomfield for an exit interview. Video / Mark Mitchell
Part of this was seen in how the response adapted to criticism during the vaccine rollout, and eventually devolved much resource and responsibility to iwi and Pasifika and community providers.
鈥淎nother lesson was the importance of good communication, not just one big message but different messages for different communities.鈥
Preparation was important, but so too good leadership.
鈥淲e know from surveys done in 2019 that the two countries best prepared for a pandemic were the US and the UK. New Zealand was not on the same score metric, we were 35th best prepared.
鈥淭he lesson here is, preparation is important. But there鈥檚 no replacement for really good leadership in decision-making and communication.鈥
New beginnings
Bloomfield said the science and research link to the Government would be a key part of the聽, serving as a professor at the University of Auckland, where he鈥檒l help establish and then chair its new Public Policy Impact Institute.
鈥淭he idea is to strengthen that link between good science and research in the public policy process. Often, they鈥檙e speaking different languages.
鈥淪o I鈥檓 looking forward to the opportunity and, again, taking some of the lessons from Covid-19, where we were very reliant on good science, evidence and expertise in our universities and communities to help inform very rapid policy decisions and then implementation.鈥
Bloomfield and his family would remain in Wellington for the role.
Asked why he hadn鈥檛 taken up further opportunities overseas, having worked at the World Health Organisation in 2011, Bloomfield said he still enjoyed working here.
鈥淚 love New Zealand. I enjoy working here. I鈥檓 a long-standing public servant and I鈥檓 looking forward to contributing to New Zealand and the Pacific in the new role.鈥
He would also be doing a piece of work led by the WHO, to review the International Health Regulations, one of the key recommendations that came out of the Independent Panel on Pandemic Preparedness and Prevention that former prime minister Helen Clark co-chaired.
On summer plans, Bloomfield said 鈥渓ike everybody鈥 he鈥檇 be hoping for a run of good weather, spending time at the beach, albeit minus 鈥渆ndorphin producing pursuits鈥 due to his broken thumb.
鈥淛ust enjoy another Kiwi, Covid-free summer. So I鈥檓 taking a few steps to make sure I don鈥檛 get Covid for Christmas and pass it on to the rest of my family.
鈥淏ut we鈥檙e so lucky to live in this amazing country.鈥
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