Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Tasmania Leads Cancer Surgery

South Hobart/Sandy Bay Cricket ClubSouth Hobart/Sandy Bay Cricket Club (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
A new national directory of cancer surgery waiting times shows Tasmanian hospitals are delivering faster services than many of the biggest hospitals in the country.
The online database, released yesterday, allows Tasmanian cancer patients to compare their hospital's performance with any other hospital in Australia.
The list shows the average wait for breast cancer surgery at the Royal Hobart Hospital is only eight days.


That compared with 12 days at the Royal Melbourne Hospital, 13 days at Sydney's Prince of Wales Hospital and 16 days at Royal Brisbane Hospital.
The average wait for prostate cancer surgery at the RHH is 28 days, compared with 30 days at Sydney's Prince of Wales, 63 days at Sydney's Royal North Shore and 44 days at Royal Brisbane Hospital.
Senior Hobart oncology physician Professor Ray Lowenthal said the data confirmed that, despite the ongoing concerns about budget cuts in the health system, important procedures were still being carried out within acceptable timeframes.
"The cancer area has been a bit protected because it is such a crucial area, and rightly so," said Prof Lowenthal, clinical professor of oncology at the University of Tasmania.
"The cancer area is not in crisis and people can get treatment in a timely fashion."
The average elective surgery waiting times for various cancers were added to the Federal Government's MyHospitals website yesterday.
Health Minister Tanya Plibersek said: "Waiting times on MyHospitals enables patients to find out more about local services and helps to drive improvements in hospital performance."

Using data from 2010-11, the website lists the number of days within which half of all patients received their surgery for bladder, bowel, breast, gynaecological, kidney, lung, melanoma and prostate cancer.
Other cancer surgery wait times at the RHH are: bladder, 25 days; bowel, 24 days; gynaecological, 16 days; lung, 11 days; melanoma, 13 days.
Cancer surgery wait times at the Launceston General Hospital are: bladder, 15 days; bowel, 19 days; breast, 11 days; gynaecological, 14 days; kidney, 29 days; melanoma, 11 days; prostate, 76 days.
State president of the Australian Medical Association John Davis said the data was a credit to the staff in Tasmanian hospitals, despite the fact the system was "falling apart".
Mr Davis, however, said the figures did not show the areas of health that were suffering severely because of the budget cuts to the system.

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Sunday, May 27, 2012

Learning The Hard Way With Autism In Tasmania

The Tasmanian coat of arms features thylacines...The Tasmanian coat of arms features thylacines as supporters. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
A Kempton mother says her autistic son will not be able to attend his school full-time next year because it cannot afford to employ a full-time teacher's aide to care for him.
Valda Watkins said she had been told by staff at Kempton Primary that five-year-old Ethan would be able to attend Grade 1 only three days a week unless she acted as his teacher aide on the other school days.
This was because the school could not afford a teacher's aide to support him in the classroom on those days, she said.
The Education Department has not denied Mrs Watkins' account of what she says she was told.
Under its Social Inclusion Policy and the disability standards for education, the State Government is obligated to provide appropriate support for all school-age children in Tasmania.
Education Department deputy secretary Liz Banks would not comment on specific details of

the case or confirm if staff at the school had told Ms Watkins to keep her son at home next year.
However, she said schools did not recommend part-time enrolments for students on the basis of funding, and parents were not asked to undertake the role of a teacher aide (Read the Education Department's full response, right).
Disability service advocates and the state's education union said many more parents of disabled children were facing a range of new problems as schools struggled to make ends meet after cutbacks in their discretionary funding budgets.
Next year, Ethan will be eligible for only three days of teacher aide support funded by the Special Disability Register. Any additional aide time would have to be funded by his school.
Ms Watkins said it was "hurtful" that her son might not get adequate support next year.
"I think every single child is entitled to an education," she said.
"Why should my son stay at home when everyone else's kid gets to go to school?
"I honestly don't know what we'll do. It's just not fair.
"At the moment, he goes to prep five days a week and has a teacher aide full-time."
Ms Watkins said Ethan had severe autism and was non-verbal.
"He's come such a long way at school. He didn't like going to school at the start of the year but

now he loves it," she said.
"To pull him out of school ... I'm really worried about what's going to happen to him."
Autism Tasmania spokeswoman Kristen Desmond was concerned the school felt it had no option to but to tell Ms Watkins to keep Ethan at home.
"How many kids at other schools under financial pressure are going to end up in a similar situation?" she said.
"It's obviously concerning that this is the state we're getting to in terms of the funding for children both on the disability register and not on the register.
"One of the things we think may be impacting on this situation is the cuts to discretionary funding [which schools rely on to pay for additional teacher aide support]."
Ms Desmond said many parents of autistic children were already receiving calls from their children's schools, asking them to collect their child if they didn't have enough aides to support them.
Association for Children with Disability executive officer Caroline Pegg said the school had an obligation to meet Ethan's needs.
"If the school is saying that he actually needs the support [for an additional three days a week] then the school actually has a legal obligation against the disability standards for education to provide that support," she said.
"The school should have looked at what other resources were available for them before the parent was even consulted."
Ms Pegg said it was unfortunate if some teachers and principals were not aware of the legal obligation to meet standards of education for all students.
Australian Education Union state president Terry Polglase said public school teachers

had welcomed the State Government's Social Inclusion Policy when it was introduced more than a decade ago because it came with the guarantee of sufficient funding to support the educational needs of every child.
"With the recent withdrawal of funding to keep class sizes at optimal levels, enforced belt-tightening and moves that could see responsibility for decision making move from systems to school principals, there is a need for a guarantee that funding to address disadvantage is restored," he said.
Opposition education spokesman Michael Ferguson said Ethan's case was the "terrible legacy" of budget cuts.
"Instead of listening to schools about the terrible impact of his cuts, Education Minister Nick McKim has slashed the education budget by a further $58 million in 2012-13," he said.
"Mr McKim has caused this funding crisis in schools, so he must take responsibility for resulting outcomes."
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Wednesday, May 23, 2012

The Cost Of Tasmanian Work Stress

stress headstress head (Photo credit: ian boyd)
Workplace stress and mental health issues in the state's public service are costing Tasmanian taxpayers millions of dollars.
The cost has risen to more than $100,000 a week as work pressure takes its toll on public servants.
The total workers' compensation bill for public servants was $30 million last financial year, up from $25 million in 2009-2010.
Statistics from WorkCover Tasmania show there were 181 mental health claims in the public sector last year at an average cost of $31,524, a total of about $5.5 million.
The figures come as the State Government cuts jobs from the public sector to plug a massive Budget black hole, prompting fears stress-related claims will grow as the cuts take effect.
The workers' compo bill for stress at the DHHS alone is about $7.5 million for the past three years.
Until March this year, $1.6 million of the $4.9 million workers' compensation claims were for stress-related issues.
Workplace stress experts said yesterday that job insecurity was one of the main workplace-related risks to mental health and unions fear workplace stress is going to be an increasing problem as the workloads for public sector workers become more intense.
Senior lecturer in management from the University of Tasmania Dr Angela Martin said work groups that experienced increased threats to job security "can have an almost palpable level of anxiety".
"The majority of people don't cope well with uncertainty," she said.
Honorary secretary of The Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists


Dr John Chalk said stress-related claims were particularly common in the key services of health, education and police.
Australian Nursing Federation state secretary Neroli Ellis said Budget cuts in health were already being felt by patients and nurses.
"The recent ANF survey indicated that 96 per cent of nurses believed there is more stress in the workplace as a result of the Budget cuts," Ms Ellis said.
"Losing valued colleagues, supporting patients and families who cannot get a bed or being told their surgery is cancelled, low morale and increasing stressful environments ... are common themes affecting nurses."
CPSU secretary Tom Lynch said workplace stress would become an increasing problem in the next four years with sweeping Budget cuts.
"I have seen a significant increase in the past twelve months," Mr Lynch said.
"I don't see any relief in the future. Statistics around the public service are embarrassing."
Liberal spokesman for police and emergency management Elise Archer said yesterday police had been asked to make cuts to the workforce for a number of years.
"We are now seeing additional cuts and we will see additional levels of stress," she said.

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Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Tasmanian Opposition Party Outline Their Budget


A LIBERAL government would create a Department of State Growth, cut 650 public sector jobs and make more money available for more elective surgery and tourism marketing, Opposition leader Will Hodgman vowed today.


Delivering his budget-in-reply in State Parliament, Mr Hodgman said his party would cut nearly $500 million in waste and non-essential spending and boost growth by amalgamating the Department of Infrastructure, Energy and Resources and the Department of Economic Development.
He also announced plans for a super bureaucrat, to be known as the Co-ordinator General, to aggressively chase investment and jobs growth in the state.



The Liberals would axe the Tasmania Together process, the State Service Commission, the state's Climate Council, the Social Inclusion Unit, the Enterprise Development initiative and cut funding to the Ten Days on the Island arts festival.
They would also slash spending on senior public servants, consultants, ministerial cars and government boards and committees, Mr Hodgman said.
Unveiling what he described as his "Road map to Recovery and Growth", Mr Hodgman said the priorities of a Liberal government would be basic services, cutting waste, building essential infrastructure and boosting economic growth.
If elected, the Liberals would abolish the government's motor vehicle registration increases, restore TAFE and extend high schools to Year 12, Mr Hodgman said.


First home builders would benefit from a $7000 grant and home duty concessions to boost the construction industry and hand back the proceeds of the carbon tax.
Fines would go up 10 per cent and criminals would have to pay an increased levy upon conviction.
Liberal Treasury spokesman Peter Gutwein projected a deficit of $268 million in the 2012-13 financial year, returning to surplus in 2014-15.
He said that even under the Liberal's plan, the state would slide into net debt, although it would not be as deep as under the Labor-Green Government.

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Monday, May 21, 2012

A Paltry 20 Year Sentence For Callous Murder In Tasmania


TWO Tasmanian men demonstrated a shocking and callous indifference to a man who was stomped to death and then left to die in the street in Launceston last year.
The indifference displayed by two murderers was a significant aggravating factor in sentencing of Neville Whiting and Scott Rock Justice Peter Evans said.
He sentenced Neville Lindsay Whiting, 32, to 20 years jail for the murder of 43-year-old Scott Rock on March 29 last year.
There was no explanation for the killing, he said, as Whiting bore Mr Rock no personal animosity.
Sean Timothy Hudson, 37, was sentenced to seven years jail for assault and for being an accessory after the fact.
The court heard that Hudson punched Mr Rock to the ground before Whiting stomped on his head four times and smashed him over the head with a backpack containing five stubbies.


Hudson, who had 21 pages of prior convictions, helped load Mr Rock's body into a car before Whiting later drove it to a remote area near Hollybank Reserve and burnt it.
"It is clear from the victim impact statements that the devastating impact of Scott Rock's death on those who cared for him was compounded by its concealment and the disposal of his body," Justice Evans said.
"They did nothing to obtain medical assitance for him, left him on the roadway, and then removed his body in order to dispose of it."
Hudson was found not guilty of murder after a jury deliberated for 27 hours.
But Mr Rock's family believed Hudson was guilty of murder.
"When you knock man to the ground and walk off and don't defend that man and go back and help him it is outright murder," sister Sharon Rock said.
Ms Rock said Hudson's prior convictions should have been aired to the jury.
"I believe if that happened he would be doing more than 7 years," she said.


She was critical of the setting of an 11 year non parole period for Whiting.
"If you are sentenced to 20 year sentence you should serve 20 years why should a judge sit there and then say 11 years," she said.
Ms Rock said her mother and family were upset.
"What justice does that give her-its criminal the law needs changing, seriously," she said.
"They are scum of the earth and should rot in hell."
Justice Evans said that Hudson's crime had been aggravated by his attempts to clean the car in which the body had been removed.
He took the car to a car wash twice and then played a role in implementing the swapping of the car by his partner Teena Kelly with another woman.
Hudson was involved with Teena Kelly, the mother of Mr Rocks son, and the murder followed a dispute between Ms Kelly and Mr Rock.
Everyone had been drinking vodka heavily for a number of hours.
After the murder Hudson and Whiting went to friend's place to have more drinks.
Two of their friends saw Mr Rock's body in the back of the car but did not ring police.



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Monday, May 14, 2012

No Blanket Protection For The Tarkine

Hellyer Gorge, TasmaniaHellyer Gorge, Tasmania (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
The Federal Environment Minister has effectively ruled out a blanket heritage listing for Tasmania's Tarkine wilderness, because parts have already been mined.
The Minister, Tony Burke, was questioned about the Tarkine during a flying visit to the state to announce the Commonwealth's approval of the Midlands Irrigation Scheme.
Mr Burke is yet to make the final call on a nomination to have the temperate rainforest heritage listed, and a number of mining proposals, including open-cut ventures.
When pressed on the issue , the Minister said the impact from past and present mines means it was not logical to have a blanket listing for the Tarkine.
Mr Burke says it is hard to argue the Savage River magnetite mine, which has been working since the 1960s, can be viewed as national heritage.


"How could you logically put a blanket heritage listing in place that covered the Savage River mine?
"When you go bushwalking through the Tarkine a lot of those walks you look down and there at your feet are the railway tracks of previous mining operations," the Minister said.
Mr Burke said he wanted to find a constructive way of dealing with heritage in significant areas, and is awaiting advice from the Heritage Council.
"I want to make sure that we can isolate those areas that are the most significant," the Minister said.
But the group lobbying for heritage listing, the Tarkine National Coalition, says Mr Burke will be pandering to the mining community if he reduces the area it has nominated for listing.
Spokesman, Scott Jordan, says it does not cover existing mines.
"What the decision's really about is whether or not the areas the Heritage Council now has recommended should be listed and that Jonathan West report's recommended should be World Heritage listed should in fact receive that level of protection or whether we're going to allow new mining to go into areas that clearly shouldn't, " said Mr Jordon.

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Saturday, May 12, 2012

$300,000 Tasmanian Drug Haul

Leaf of Cannabis עברית: עלה של קנביסLeaf of Cannabis עברית: עלה של קנביס (Photo credit: Wikipedia)Dense raceme of carpellate flowers typical of ...Dense raceme of carpellate flowers typical of drug-type varieties of Cannabis. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)DETECTIVES have seized one of their biggest cannabis hauls ever in Tasmania's far North-West.
Twenty-seven kilograms of cannabis, with a street value of about $300,000, was seized from a property outside Smithton two weeks ago.
The bush weed had been harvested and was being processed when police swooped.
A 52-year-old Smithton man has been arrested and charged with drug trafficking and has been summoned to appear in the Smithton Court of Petty Sessions.
Police believe other people were involved in growing the crop and in plans to distribute the drugs. Investigations are continuing.
"This was not a one-man operation and we believe other people had knowledge of the crop,"

Detective-Sergeant Simon Conroy said at the Burnie police station yesterday.
Det-Sgt Conroy said the Tasmanian cannabis growing season was now coming to an end and police had swooped on the property after receiving a tip-off from the public.
He said the cannabis was ready for sale and the crop was too big to justify any potential claims it had been grown for personal use.
"Hopefully, the seizure will affect cannabis supply in Circular Head and the greater North-West Coast area," Det-Sgt Conroy said.
"We also hope the demonstration that information from the public can result in seizures of this scale will prompt other people to come forward."
Tasmania's Drug Investigation Services charged 436 offenders with serious drug trafficking, or selling, offences in 2010-2011. Just over 220kg of processed cannabis and 4952 plants were seized.
The latest raid follows another in Glenorchy last year during which a traffickable quantity of cannabis was seized as part of a robbery investigation.
In August last year, a Rokeby man who smuggled cannabis with a street value of nearly $65,000 on a Spirit of Tasmania ferry was jailed for eight months.
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Wednesday, May 9, 2012

No Cash Boost Ailing For Tasmanian Health System


  1. Australian Nursing Federation
Australian Nursing Federation (Photo credit: Wikipedia)Hopes for a major injection of funds into Tasmania's ailing health system have not been forthcoming, with Federal Treasurer Wayne Swan delivering only a modest boost mirroring the rest of the country.


Health professionals have been calling for a federal takeover of the state's health system or an immediate injection of funds to counter the effects of sweeping State Government budget cuts to the health system.


However, last night's Federal Budget offered no extra favours for Tasmania.


The state will get a 6.7 per cent boost in the next 12 months compared with a national average increase of about 6.4 per cent.


Mr Swan has increased the state's health funding by $18.8 million from $279.6 million for the 2011-12 financial year to $298.4 million for the 2012-13 financial year.


Redevelopment funds for the Royal Hobart Hospital remain in the Budget.




However, no further major health infrastructure projects were announced for Tasmania last night.


Australian Nursing Federation branch secretary Neroli Ellis said the limited federal boost in funding placed further pressure on the State Government when it delivers its Budget on May 17.


"We have around a 5 per cent decrease in State Budget," Ms Ellis said.


"So it [the Federal Budget] is not keeping up with demand."


Ms Ellis said the next "State Budget is crucial now".


"We will be hoping the State Government will address the immediate short-term concerns we have been discussing in the past few months," she said.


Australian Medical Association state president John Davis said health had been generally sheltered from budget cuts however more funds were needed for Tasmania.




Dr Davis and Ms Ellis both welcomed additional national funding which would flow to Tasmanians in the areas of aged care, bowel cancer screening, dental services and electronic health initiatives.


One new initiative, to be rolled out across Australia, will be funding to help patients aged 15 to 24 with emerging psychotic disorders.


During the next financial year $3.5 million will be provided to Tasmania to help establish centres that will provide services to help these patients.


Health Minister Tanya Plibersek said there would be funding to increase the numbers of doctors, nurses and health professionals in Ulverstone on the North-West Coast but did not reveal any further detail.


Australian families will benefit from a $233.7 million investment to continue the rollout of the national, secure eHealth system which will deliver safer and better health services.


Dr Davis welcomed the eHealth funding but said the Budget revealed there would be some costs placed on doctors to use the eHealth infrastructure.


Areas of savings in the Budget include Medicare rebates for cosmetic surgery and private health insurance rebates for some natural therapies.


One of the biggest areas to be hit is Medicare rebates for cosmetic surgery, which have been capped.


The Government will save $96.5 million over four years by capping a range of procedures covered by the extended Medicare safety net.


Under the safety net, the Commonwealth pays 80 per cent of out-of-pocket costs for procedures once a yearly threshold of $1160 has been reached.


Ms Plibersek says some items are being capped "to discourage excessive fees and to prevent people from misusing Medicare to pay for cosmetic surgery".


Items on the hit list include vulvoplasty or labioplasty, minor plastic surgery, varicose vein procedures, reversal of male sterilisation, eye injections, nipple reconstruction and nose work.


At the same time the private health insurance rebate will no longer be paid for natural therapies unless the chief medical officer decides they are "clinically effective".



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Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Tasmanian Premier's Top Adviser Quits

The Tasmanian coat of arms features thylacines...The Tasmanian coat of arms features thylacines as supporters. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
PREMIER Lara Giddings' chief of staff, Mark Sayer, is leaving the job.
Mr Sayer was appointed by former premier David Bartlett, a personal friend, and was kept on by Ms Giddings when she became Premier in January last year.
"Mark's insight, experience and links across the public service, private sector and Commonwealth Government have been invaluable," Ms Giddings said in a statement.


"His strengths lie in planning and policy and he has been a steady hand in helping to navigate the many challenging policy issues I have confronted in my first 17 months as Premier.
"He has driven real efficiencies in ministerial offices, which has helped show leadership to the broader public service as we work to find Budget savings."
Mr Sayer said it was the right time to hand over to someone else.
"Following David Bartlett's departure I agreed to stay on to assist Lara with the transition process," Mr Sayer said in the same statement.
"During that time we have tackled some significant challenges, particularly in ensuring ministerial offices are streamlined and efficient in a time of immense Budget pressure.
"I have reached the halfway point of this Government and I believe there is a solid framework in place for the future.


"I have spoken to Lara and we have agreed that the time is right to hand over to someone else to build on that framework as we move to the next phase of this Government."
Mr Sayer was general manager of Skills Tasmania before working with Mr Bartlett.
He had previously held senior positions in the Department of Economic Development and the State Treasurer's Office, and has also worked as a business development consultant and a primary school teacher in NSW and Tasmania.
Mr Sayer took over from Terry Field, the brother of former premier Michael Field.
In March 2010 Mr Sayer was rescued on a kayaking trip off Flinders Island with Michael Field.
The pair were in a two-man kayak when they hit strong winds and enormous seas.
Ms Giddings said Mr Sayer's replacement would be announced soon.





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