Community-led action is essential for building a more effective and equitable health system. Yet Aotearoa New Zealand's history of top-down structural reforms has undermined progress toward "healthy futures for all". We draw on complexity science and system-change principles to explain why genuine devolution and community engagement are not just ideological preferences but practical necessities in a complex health system. Community agency and locally tailored innovation can drive emergent, system-wide improvements, but only if central structures enable and sustain these relationships. A key step is reframing our mental model of the health system from a linear machine to a complex adaptive system. We discuss how the turbulence of current policy changes fits into long-running patterns and why a clearer conceptualisation of complexity can guide policymakers toward tangible actions that reorient the system towards patients and communities. Finally, we outline some essential ingredients for how New Zealand can transition from rhetoric and good intentions to the effective implementation of an equitable, community-centred health system.
Matheson et al. (Wed,) studied this question.