Fun Australian fact for you – An episode of the English show Peppa Pig has twice been pulled off air in Australia after being deemed inappropriate for Aussie children. The episode’s main message... "spiders can’t hurt you" pic.twitter.com/6nP0Ji1jVJ
— Adam Sharp (@AdamCSharp) August 23, 2024
Saturday, 31 August 2024
Tweet of the Week
Friday, 24 March 2023
Addressing flood trauma in Northern Rivers children thirteen months after a catastrophic unnatural disaster
The Sydney Morning Herald, “Northern Rivers in youth mental health crisis”, 20 March 2023, excerpt:
A soon-to-be-published resilience survey has found levels of depression and anxiety symptoms are now higher among Northern Rivers children and young people than the national average of earlier survey participants for some student groups.
Conducted almost six months after the February 2022 disaster, the survey was taken by 6611 school students, nearly 13 per cent of all young people aged between five and 19 in the region.
It found that almost one in three Northern Rivers primary students and more than one in three secondary students were at risk of depression and anxiety.
More than 40 per cent of primary students were at risk of trauma-related stress. For secondary students, it was almost 20 per cent.
Inundated, isolated, in despair: Floodwaters around Lismore’s St Carthage’s Cathedral and Trinity Catholic College.CREDIT:GETTY
Healthy North Coast, a not-for profit organisation delivering the Australian government's Primary Health Network program in the region, commissioned the research as the first step in its Resilient Kids initiative, funded by a $10 million grant from the National Emergency Management Agency.
Healthy North Coast chief executive Monika Wheeler said that the survey established a baseline which could help to measure the mental health and wellbeing of young people in the Northern Rivers over time.
She said young people reported generally feeling supported and connected within their schools and communities. However, the survey also highlighted areas to focus on in future.
"The Resilient Kids initiative will use local insights to design tailored mental health and wellbeing supports," she said.
"We know that successful recovery is based on understanding community context and is not a one-off event.
"It's multi-year, multi-layered, and our approach to supporting our young people might change over time as we see how they respond."
Tens of millions of federal and state dollars has been promised for mental health and wellbeing programs in the region's schools and wider community.
Safe haven hubs have opened across the region to provide free mental health support. Drop-ins are encouraged and there is no need for referrals or appointments. For young people, dedicated online and phone services also are available.
The difficulty is reaching those who won't, or can't, use these services.
Children's charities Unicef Australia and Royal Far West are rolling out a $4.5 million support program covering 30 state primary schools and preschools in the Northern Rivers and south-east Queensland.
Social workers, psychologists, speech pathologists and occupational therapists will enter school communities to help staff address learning delays in children.
Unicef Australia chief advocate for children Nicole Breeze said thousands of children will need intensive support, as the effects of the disaster can potentially remain hidden for years.
"Our first engagement in this space was after the Black Summer bushfires," she said. "With children the impact can stay hidden, it can take a year or two, sometimes three. The good news is that with the right support, at the right time, they can bounce back."
The plight of Northern Rivers children garnered international attention Last April when Prince William spoke online with Jeanette Wilkins, the principal of St Joseph's Primary School Woodburn, who told him the community had lost its school and "everything in it" and the mental health of the community had taken a major blow.
The school was underwater for eight days.
"We're two months down the track and nothing has changed, those 34 families are still displaced, so there's no certainty for those children," she told the prince.
"For us, the most important thing was to make contact with our families and our children, and as fast as possible to set up a school somewhere just to get the children back to some form of normality and start dealing with their trauma."
At Christmas, 29 families of students and staff at St Joseph's (more than half the students) were still living in some form of temporary housing such as a caravan, shed, shipping container or the shell of their flood-stripped home.
Ten Catholic schools in the Lismore diocese were directly affected by the floods, including St Joseph's. Three schools are inaccessible, and 1250 students are being taught in temporary facilities.
Morning tea and lunch are provided in some schools, as are new school uniforms and shoes, to help address absenteeism. A team of 30 counsellors is working in 23 schools, and community services provider Social Futures is operating in seven of the flood-hit schools to assist families in gaining to access additional mental health social and financial support.
Thirty-seven state facilities suffered significant damage, and five schools still operate away from their original site.
Monday, 23 March 2020
Northern Rivers independent schools and tertiary institutions are considering their options during this global pandemic
The Northern Star, 19 March 2020:
Cape Byron Rudolf Steiner School will be the first school on the Northern Rivers to effectively close due to the coronavirus (COVID-19).
Parents of 370 children the school have been advised to keep the kids at home from Wednesday if possible. School is open, but most kids have stayed home.
“We have a very small number of students here at school,” Principal Nerida Johnson said.
“It’s been quiet all week, we had 34 per cent of students absent yesterday.”
Vulnerable staff and students were advised to stay home early in the week and her directive, issued to all students on Wednesday morning, has been met with relief. .....
“Essentially, we are making decisions looking at all the reports and making sure we’re doing our bit to keep the community safe,” Ms Johnson said.
“Parents have been overwhelmingly supportive; I don’t think I’ve ever seen so many messages of support.
“Parents were feeling frustrated at the mixed messaging, we are being told to self-isolate and at the same time to send our children to school.
“We cannot possibly do physically distancing with the younger classes; we cannot keep classrooms of children 1.5m away from each other.
The Northern Star, 19 March 2020:
Southern Cross University will deliver all its study programs online from Monday, March 23, but its campuses will remain open.
This includes Lismore, Coffs Harbour and Gold Coast regional campuses, as well as metropolitan campuses in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane and Perth.
Vice Chancellor Professor Adam Shoemaker announced the move as a response to the continuing impacts of the COVID-19 outbreak.
“We have made this move in the best interests of our students and our teaching staff,” the Vice Chancellor said.
“While every degree that we offer will now be available online, all of our campuses remain open.”
All teaching will convert to the online mode by Monday. “Unless otherwise advised, classes will be delivered online at the same time that face-to-face classes would have occurred.
Students’ timetables will not change, but how they engage with classes will,” Professor Shoemaker said.
“Some activity which cannot be undertaken online — such as clinical placements in Health and Teaching practicums — will continue unless otherwise advised.
Friday, 14 June 2019
Parents with LGBTIQ children call on Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison "to do as he promised which was to govern for all of the people which surely must include the LGBTIQ people"
Friday, 30 November 2018
Call to protect infants from dangerous infectious disease, whooping cough
Sunday, 17 June 2018
NSW Berejiklian Government still playing hide and seek with independent review of the out-of-home care system
In November 2015 the NSW Government gave retired senior public servant David Tune the task of conducting an independent review of the out-of-home care system in the state.
In August 2016 the then Baird Government Cabinet considered his report.
However, it took until 2018, on the heel of threats from the NSW Upper House, before this report was released by the Berejiklian Government.
Although details of this report have become available to mainstream media, as yet there is no complete copy on the NSW Government's Family & Community Services or "Their Futures Matter" websites.
So it was not surprising to see the responsible minister duck for cover.
Friday, 8 June 2018
Being political tzar of all one surveys does not always mean that the world will bow down before you
There is no disputing that since becoming the ministerial head of that new 'super' federal government department, the Department of Home Affairs, Minister for Immigration and Border Protection Peter Craig Dutton has enjoyed a level of political power not shared by his ministerial colleagues.
However he is obviously not happy that this power does not intimidate Australian courts and tribunals.
Perhaps this is because his Migration and Refugee Division and Character Assessments and Cancellations Branch are not always winning Dutton's war against orphans, refugees and those under threat of torture.
Administrative Appeals Tribunal decisions1 in 2018:
Friday, 25 May 2018
Now customers can't even trust their local bank tellers
It seems schoolchildren are considered fair game by the big banks......
Thursday, 10 May 2018
Saying "Thank you"......
We will never forget certain things from this journey ever in our lives. On March 22, 2018 our lives changed forever.
Watching our baby Emerald (7 months old) go into cardiac arrest and multi organ failure one hour after arriving at our local hospital, me just taking her because I thought she was sick, then it all went downhill from there. The NETs retrieval team was called in to take us to Westmead; Emerald suffered a seizure in Grafton from low blood sugar that resulted in a brain injury and fluid on her brain, needing life support. It took NETS another six hours to stabilise her to get on the plane. Emerald was blue and lifeless and no one thought she would make it; in that moment I thought my baby had died, then the next day eight hours after arrival at the children’s hospital, we had a diagnosis of a very rare CHD called ALCAPA that Emerald had been silently fighting for seven months and was never picked up. They took her for major open heart surgery at 8am on March 23; the longest day of my life. They told me to be prepared for the worst as they expected Emerald to come back on the ECMO (the double bypass machine for lungs and heart).
3pm came and Emmy was about to come out of surgery and she wasn’t on the machine! When the head surgeon sat me down and pretty much told me no one told him about her low blood sugar and Emerald suffered another seizure creating a complication for the surgery, yet she still didn’t come back on that machine, they kept telling me that she would end up on it to give her heart a rest; the next week was very touch and go, we almost lost our girl three more times but still no ECMO; Emerald was fighting so hard
And the doctors telling me that her liver and kidneys won’t make it; she was so puffed up with fluid and so yellow from the jaundice and that they thought she had more seizures, but couldn’t tell because she was on the muscle relaxant, the only thought in my head was if she was going to be ok. I didn’t care if her brain injury resulted in her being a little more special, I just wanted to know she was ok – they couldn’t guarantee us anything and they still can’t. Emerald also contacted two blood infections, pneumonia from being on the life support and a collapsed lung.
This experience has been very trying and testing and very traumatising and we feel so out of our comfort zone being here and almost 700km away from home.
A few anxiety attacks from mum and dad over the last 5 weeks
Some very touch and go moments I will never forget.
We are slowly on the road to recovery, Emerald has astounded all her doctors with how far she has come and that she ever once stopped fighting.
I could not be standing here today beside my heart warrior if it wasn’t for the support from my family and friends and the entire community who has rallied around my daughter to help us. Thank you for all the donations and the prayers; we are truly blessed to have such caring kind hearted people in our lives and our little gem is fighting to get back to our little community so we can say thank you to everyone that has helped us.
Thank you from the bottom of my heart.
I know this journey still has a long, long way to go and the shock has worn off finally and is only just hitting me now, but every day is a step closer to home and Emmy is improving every single day.
And I appreciate everything you all have done – Thank you.
Thank you for never leaving Emerald in the dark.
Sunday, 9 April 2017
Labor attempts to close anti-vaccination loophole
Sunday, 28 August 2016
Failing To Meet Aspirational Health Targets: childhood immunisation rates on NSW North Coast lowest in Australia
Tuesday, 26 July 2016
NT Attorney-General Johan (John) Wessel Elferink's incompetence and possible negligence exposed
Elferink also remains listed on NT Government main website as Minister for Children and Families, Minister for Health, Minister for Disability Services and Minister for Mental Health Services.
I understand there are rules which guide the prisons in Australia and the United Nations, and how we use basic human rights in the treatment of prisoners and so forth. I understand that. What I do not understand is how we are soft, flaccid, and incapable of punishing prisoners in our Corrections system. The soft and flaccid approach of the treatment of prisoners in the Northern Territory is having a detrimental effect on building the social fabric in our towns and, in particular, Alice Springs…..