Sunday, 21 March 2021

Due to Morrison Government's failure to secure adequate COVID-19 vaccine stocks the current 1,000 GP practices in the national vaccine program are being rationed to between 50-100 doses a week

 

On 5 January 2020 the world became aware that a highly infectious novel coronavirus had been discovered and sometime that month a number of Australian scientists became part of global search for a COVID-19 vaccine.


By the morning of 19 August 2020 Prime Minister Scott Morrison was announcing that Australia had secured 25 million doses of the Oxford University-AstraZeneca vaccine. By the evening of 19 August drug company AstraZeneca was stating that this announcement was not true.


This should have been a warning that worse organizational blunders were likely on the horizon.


Over the next four months there were repeated government announcements bragging about how many AstraZeneca, Pfizer and Novavax vaccine doses Morrison & Co had secured for Australia – until the total reached over 134 million doses.


Come January 2021 and the Morrison Government was now only talking about est. 50 million vaccine doses and by 14 February was warning that supply problems at home and abroad meant that only 700,000 doses were in hand.


An amount which (provided a miracle occurs and there is zero wastage from use of multi-dose vials) means that only 350,000 people can be fully vaccinated.


Is it any wonder that the national COVID-19 vaccination program rollout is a shambles and a rationing of vaccine doses is underway until more vaccine is available.


ABC News, 19 March 2021:


Health Minister Greg Hunt this week announced what would have been music to the ears of more than 6 million Australians — it's now your turn to get the coronavirus vaccine.


But for general practices across the country, the news sounded like thousands of phones that would not stop ringing.


The Australian government released a list of GP clinics that would be able to start vaccinations from March 22 and an online eligibility checker that gives a contact number for vaccine providers in your area.


Kathy Turner, a GP based near Geelong in Victoria, said the government told people to contact their GPs without giving prior warning to clinics, some of which had not yet received doses.


"You should have heard the phone — I couldn't believe it," Dr Turner said.


"It was a premature announcement on the government's part and it was done without consultation with general practice.


"My manager was on the ball and took control pretty quickly and put a recorded message to say 'please don't phone about getting the COVID vaccination, they haven't arrived yet and we'll be getting a limited number only to start off with'."


Junction Street Family Practice in Nowra on New South Wales' south coast is preparing to administer 100 COVID vaccinations a week.


But when the government released the list of GPs taking part in the Phase 1B rollout, practice manager Gail Lloyd was shocked to find her clinic was not on the list.


"We're not coming up as a vaccination centre because we're on the week two rollout but nobody's really specified that and now if our patients go looking at any of the websites they don't find us," Ms Lloyd said.


"I thought that was badly managed, they could have said there are other practices coming on board, ring your own practice first."


Mr Hunt has said the plan was always to make the announcement on Wednesday.


Low number of COVID doses assigned to GPs


Like many GPs across the country, Dr Turner's clinic has been given a small supply of the vaccine, just 80 doses per week.


It's a meager amount compared to up to the 140 flu vaccinations a day they gave to patients in April last year.


"If they're not giving them to us, how can we be blamed for not giving them?" she said.


John Hilton, a GP at the Grange Medical Centre in Cooloongup, south of Perth, said his clinic had only been assigned 50 COVID vaccines a week.


"It's not a case of our capacity, it's a case of what supplies will be given as to how many we vaccinate," Dr Hilton said.


"Last year we would have done 1,000 flu vaccines in a two-to-three-week period, without effecting the running of the practice.


"We can run these things — it's one of our core businesses, providing vaccinations — we've got the know-how and the resources to do it."


"This is a massive logistical effort on the part of GP clinics across Australia and we need all the support we can get from the government," Dr Price said.


"GP clinics on the front line are under an extraordinary amount of pressure and we need the government to communicate clearly with us.


"GPs need assurances on the supply chain of doses and predictable supply well ahead of time in order to match the demand with supply, staffing and practice logistics."


Thousands of clinics to deliver vaccine by April


Health Department secretary Brendan Murphy has said Australia is not in a hurry with the rollout and people should not badger their GPs.


"While some GP clinics are coming online next week, they won't be releasing appointments until they're sure of their vaccine deliveries, which are coming in the next day or two," he said.


Dr Hilton said the government may have been overconfident in its vaccine supply.


"Maybe they had a high expectation of being higher on the worldwide list," he said.


"But we've been doing the footwork to make sure our end will run seamlessly when it does."


Ms Lloyd said it was exciting to be part of the COVID vaccination roll-out but the process had become more complex than it needed to be.


"I think it is a shame that everybody couldn't just be vaccinating their own patients because it's always better for people to be going to their own practice where their medical record and history is," she said.


The government expects that 4,000 GP clinics will be able to administer the vaccines by the end of April.


Friday, 19 March 2021

A perspective on Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison's inability to comprehend that all women have a right to equality and respect

 

ABC News, 16 March 2021:


The early signs of an earthquake can often be easy to miss.


Above the ground, the initial tremors can seem innocuous. But deep below, the tectonic shifting of plates can set in motion a series of events that rip apart the earth and bring down all that stands above it.


Prime Minister Scott Morrison could be forgiven for missing the early signs of the quake that would destabilise his government and upend the nation's political landscape.


When those early tremors started, Morrison was riding high. The nation was bouncing back from an economic recession and the man who'd won an unlikely victory years earlier appeared on track for re-election.


His focus was solely on a successful vaccine rollout, which he hoped would bolster the public's confidence in his government.


Weeks later, he'd find himself inside the House of Representatives, all but praising the nation for not shooting the protesters that had gathered outside.


"This is a vibrant liberal democracy," he offered.


"Not far from here, such marches, even now, are being met with bullets, but not here in this country."


Scott Morrison is a man under pressure.


He has two Cabinet ministers, representing a quarter of the government's national security committee, on medical leave.


His government is facing allegations of a toxic culture towards women, particularly young female staffers.


Morrison played an unlikely role in the catalyst that would shake the foundations of the nation's Parliament.


He beamed as he stood alongside Grace Tame as she held her Australian of the Year trophy — an all-but-typical sight for a Prime Minister each January.


It was this sight that gave former Liberal staffer Brittany Higgins the confidence to come forward only weeks later, and make public an allegation that she had been raped in a ministerial office, mere metres from the Prime Minister's office within Parliament House.


As she stepped forward into the light, so too came other women across the nation, each unearthing a growing list of allegations that ranged from bullying to sexual assault.


It derailed the government's planned focus on vaccines and forced the Coalition onto the back foot. The days of solely focussing on the pandemic are ending and with that comes greater scrutiny of the government on multiple fronts.


The Prime Minister knows all too well the power of marketing and imagery.


He projects the image of a daggy dad, the Sharks-loving, cap-wearing suburban everyman who builds chicken coops for his daughters.


So you only had to see the shirt he was wearing — the national netball team's — when he got his first COVID-19 vaccine to realise how aware he was about the reputational damage being inflicted on his government because of its culture towards women.


That culture has been a scourge on Parliament House long before Scott Morrison became Prime Minister.


But as the leader of the government it's his task to handle.


He's faced blowback for saying he had to talk to his wife to realise he had to respond to Brittany Higgins's allegations as if they were coming from his own daughters.


He's also faced criticism for referring to Ms Higgins as "Brittany", rather than Ms Higgins.


The same way he referred to Chief Nursing and Midwifery Officer Alison McMillan, a professor, as "chief nurse Alison", while Chief Medical Officer Paul Kelly gets a "Professor Kelly".


Though each are small, the Prime Minister is facing questions about if they add up to something bigger.


"Not so much a tin ear as a wall of concrete," Labor leader Anthony Albanese offered in Parliament yesterday……


Former chief medical officer Brendan Murphy or the former NSW fire chief Shane Fitzsimmons were heavy favourites to be named Australian of the Year.


If either man had been awarded the honour, they'd have easily joined the ranks of the distinguished Australians to hold the position.


And if Murphy or Fitzimmons had been named Australian of the Year, it's unlikely the nation would still be talking about them more than a month later.


It's very possible it would've meant the Prime Minister would still be riding high, talking about the vaccine and an economy in recovery.


Grace Tame changed all that.


She has advanced a reckoning that has long hung over the nation's Parliament and its treatment of women.


It's grown into a story beyond Parliament House and forced the nation to confront how women in all walks of life are treated in Australia.


There is no quick fix that Morrison could announce to solve this problem.


To change a culture takes time.


But for the tens of thousands who rallied around the nation, they were looking for signs the nation's leaders were listening.


What they heard was a Prime Minister who said they should be thankful they weren't shot.


Thursday, 18 March 2021

All those wonderful women who marched and those who support them in Australia 2021

 


On 15 March 2015 women and girls marched in villages, towns and citiesspread across Australia from coast to coast.

They marched demanding that gender-based violence against women and children stop.

A demand which insists that the federal government listen, act and lead a long overdue change in institutional attitudes which either turn a blind eye to or openly condone sexual assault, sexual harassment, domestic violence, the double burden for many women of gender based discrimination coupled with racial discrimination and, a shameful murder rate which sees women murdered by their current partners or former partners at the rate of one woman every nine days [House of Representatives, Hansard, p.62].

Here are just some of the images from that 14 to 15 March which were 
tweeted by marchers as they happened.....





















Some of the supporters showing solidarity.....


BACKGROUND


Just one of the reports that Scott Morrison and his government have not acted on since he became prime minister in August 2018.

Australian Human Rights Commission, Respect@Work: Sexual Harassment National Inquiry Report (2020), 5 March 2020:

1 Introduction
1.1 Executive Summary

(a) The National Inquiry into Sexual Harassment in Australian Workplaces

Workplace sexual harassment is prevalent and pervasive: it occurs in every industry, in every location and at every level, in Australian workplaces. Australians, across the country, are suffering the financial, social, emotional, physical and psychological harm associated with sexual harassment. This is particularly so for women.

This behaviour also represents a very real financial impost to the economy through lost productivity, staff turnover and other associated impacts.

In June 2018, against the backdrop of the momentum of the #MeToo movement and recognition of the prevalence of, and immense harm caused by sexual harassment in Australian, and global, workplaces, the Sex Discrimination Commissioner, Kate Jenkins, and the then Minister for Women, the Hon Kelly O’Dwyer, announced the National Inquiry into Sexual Harassment in Australian Workplaces (Inquiry).

As Australia’s national human rights institution, the Australian Human Rights Commission (the Commission) was tasked with undertaking this Inquiry. The Commission has an established record of undertaking initiatives aimed at addressing sexual harassment and promoting gender equality.

In the Terms of Reference, the Commission’s task was to review and report on workplace sexual harassment and make recommendations in relation to:

    • its prevalence, nature and reporting in Australian workplaces
    • the role of technology
    • its drivers, including risk factors for particular population groups or in  different workplace settings
    • the current legal framework
    • existing measures to address it and examples of good practice
    • its impacts on individuals and businesses, including its economic impact.

This report outlines the Commission’s findings and recommendations. The full list of recommendations is set out at the end of this Executive Summary.

The purpose of this Inquiry is to improve how Australian workplaces prevent and respond to sexual harassment, including through an examination of the systemic issues set out in its Terms of Reference.

The Commission established a Reference Group to provide advice and guidance for the Inquiry. It included members from across government, business groups, unions, academia and the legal and community sector (see Section 1.4(b) for a list of members). The Commission acknowledges and thanks Reference Group members for their valuable assistance with engaging stakeholders and providing frank and robust advice and guidance on the Inquiry.

The Commission received 460 submissions from government agencies, business groups, community bodies and, above all, victims. From September 2018 to February 2019, the Commission conducted 60 consultations as part of the Inquiry, with more than 600 individuals participating in all capital cities and some regional locations across Australia. It also held three roundtables and numerous meetings with key stakeholders.

This report is a reflection of the contributions of many individuals and organisations and the Commission is grateful to those who took the time to attend a consultation, write a submission or assist the Inquiry.

There is an urgency and demand for change across all corners of society.

Australia is also being closely watched internationally. This is Australia’s moment to be a global leader on this important and topical issue.



Wednesday, 17 March 2021

Northern Rivers health staff to finally begin receiving COVID-19 vaccinations from this week

 

Northern NSW Local Health District, media release, 15 March 2021:


The Northern NSW Local Health District will start providing COVID-19 vaccinations to its staff from Wednesday 17 March, 2021.


It’s an exciting milestone for our District, as we start to bring our local clinics on board as part of the NSW Health vaccination program to protect our staff and vulnerable residents from COVID-19,” Chief Executive, Wayne Jones, said.


Northern NSW Local Health District will commence three COVID-19 vaccination clinics at Lismore Base Hospital on 17 March, The Tweed Hospital on 19 March and Grafton Base Hospital on 22 March.


In the coming weeks, outreach clinics will also begin operating at the Multi-Purpose Sites at Bonalbo, Nimbin, Kyogle and Urbenville.


Initially, the clinics will provide vaccines for health staff, residential aged care residents, and local Ambulance personnel.


The clinics will use the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine, which requires people to receive two vaccinations approximately 12 weeks apart.


It’s extremely exciting to know that almost 12 months to the day after our very first case of COVID-19 in Northern NSW, we are now able to administer a vaccine which will enable our communities to be protected from the most severe effects of the disease,” Mr Jones said.


The first COVID-19 case was recorded in the Northern NSW Local Health District on 16 March 2020, and there have been 68 cases among residents to date.


I also need to thank our extremely hard-working health staff who have been supporting our community and our health service in every aspect of the pandemic response. Standing up the vaccine clinics so quickly is another example of the outstanding commitment of our dedicated staff,” Mr Jones said.


Members of the public can check the Australian Government’s online vaccine eligibility checker to see which group they are in, and when they will be likely to receive the vaccine.


More information on the COVID-19 vaccination rollout in NSW is available on the NSW Health website.



Tuesday, 16 March 2021

REX Airlines Sydney-Grafton-Lismore route to remain open until September 2021?

 

It would seem that the Clarence Valley’s only airport at Grafton may have received a temporary reprieve.


On 22 February 2021 Regional Express Airlines (REX) announced for a second time in a little over eight months that it would be abandoning its passenger service into Grafton Airport, this time commencing 23 March 2021.


Again leaving the Clarence Valley without a passenger airline service.


Now that Lismore City and Clarence Valley Councils have been successful in getting an extension of the Regional Aviation Network Support program for the next six months - alas not the twelve months they lobbied for - it is expected that REX will continue to fly the Sydney-Grafton-Lismore route.


However, REX is yet to issue a media release confirming that it has altered its plans to abandon its passenger service to Grafton on 23 March.


Given the airline's established modus operandi I would not be surprised to learn that it is approaching both local governments to see if it can squeeze more airport fee or other concessions from them before it commits to flying in for another six months.


Live on the NSW North Coast and looking forward to half-priced airfare to a holiday destination this year? Prepare to be disappointed.

 

On 11 March 2021 Prime Minister Scott Morrison announced 800,000 "half-price" airfares to get Australians travelling across 13 key tourism regions, the Gold Coast, Cairns, the Whitsundays and Mackay region (Proserpine and Hamilton Island), the Sunshine Coast, Lasseter and Alice Springs, Launceston, Devonport and Burnie, Broome, Avalon, Merimbula, and Kangaroo Island.


According to Morrison’s media release, the discounts will be off the average fare and will be available on airline websites from 1 April.


This wording suggests that the discount on airfares might not be 50 percent of the price of a ticket.


Media reports suggest that the booking period is four months long, ending on 31 July and it appears the scheme allows flights to be booked as far ahead as December 2021.


However, these discounted fares will only apply to flights out of capital cities according to this breakdown in The Guardian on 11 May 2021:


Thirteen Australian locations are eligible for subsidised half-price flights as part of the government’s push to boost regional tourism. 
Photograph: The Guardian


Sydney: flights to the Gold Coast, Cairns, Proserpine, Hamilton Island, Maroochydore, Uluru, Alice Springs, Launceston, Broome and Avalon.


Melbourne: flights to the Gold Coast, Cairns, Maroochydore, Alice Springs, Uluru, Launceston, Devonport, Burnie, Broome and Merimbula.


Adelaide: flights to the Gold Coast, Maroochydore, Alice Springs and Kangaroo Island.


Brisbane: flights to Alice Springs, Uluru and Launceston.


Darwin: flights to Cairns and Broome.


Perth: flights to Alice Springs.


Avalon: flights to the Gold Coast.


Even if people living in north-east NSW drove to Brisbane, the only destinations they would be offered under Morrison’s scheme are Alice Springs, Uluru and Launceston. If people caught a full-price flight from Ballina Airport to Sydney they would be offered Gold Coast, Cairns, Proserpine, Hamilton Island, Maroochydore, Uluru, Alice Springs, Launceston, Broome and Avalon.


For most there is no hope of using a discounted ticket to holiday with or near family.


As for tourism operators from Clarence Valley to the NSW-Qld border – this scheme offers them nothing.