четверг, 1 марта 2012 г.
Vic: Nurses say bed shortages worse than state gov t admits = 2
AAP General News (Australia)
08-08-2000
Vic: Nurses say bed shortages worse than state gov t admits = 2
A spokeswoman for Health Minister JOHN THWAITES says all hospitals last week reported
to the Department of Human Services that 333 of the 360 beds had been opened to alleviate
emergency demand.
But she says the nurses' claim of a nursing shortage was correct.
She says there's a shortage across Australia and other developed countries like the UK.
The spokeswoman says it was for that reason the state government had taken a number
of measures to relieve the strain on practising nurses and to attract others back into
the profession.
She says of the 70,000 registered nurses only 56,000 were working at present.
AAP RTV er/jx/jn
KEYWORD: HOSPITALS VIC 2 MELBOURNE (REOPENS)
2000 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Fed: Defence assessment reasonable to make, says Cosgrove
AAP General News (Australia)
02-20-2000
Fed: Defence assessment reasonable to make, says Cosgrove
CANBERRA, Feb 20 AAP - A fresh assessment of Defence was a reasonable move for any
new leader, Interfet commander Major-General Peter Cosgrove said today.
On Friday, Defence secretary Allan Hawke slammed the department he inherited 100 days
ago, saying it lacked credibility and direction, was too inwardly focused, and faced financial
crisis.
In a candid assessment of the organisation, Dr Hawke said many defence personnel lacked
confidence in their senior leaders.
General Cosgrove has responded by saying Dr Hawke should be encouraged to make such assessments.
"It's reasonable for the new leadership of the department to have a very good look
... and I for one would be prepared to look very carefully at any advice we're given by
the new secretary because ... that's his job," he told the Nine network.
"He ought to be encouraged to look very carefully at the whole Defence operation."
But former Army chief General John Sanderson attacked politicians, accusing them of
serious weakness in defence strategy.
While Dr Hawke praised Australia's military operation in East Timor, General Sanderson
said it was one thing to enforce peace on a "confused rabble", like Timor militias, but
quite another to take on a well-armed force.
General Cosgrove said he did not see General Sanderson's comments as a put-down - but
pointed out that a bullet was lethal, whoever fired it.
"General Sanderson is a very respected and eminent soldier and I would always listen
very carefully to the sorts of things that he might argue," he said.
"I suppose it doesn't matter much to a soldier who's being shot at whether it's by
a well-organised enemy or a member of a confused rabble.
"The bullet still travels at the same velocity, 3,300 feet per second, and if it aims
correctly it still kills you. None of my soldiers have ever lost sight of that."
General Cosgrove said he had enjoyed total support over East Timor.
"I've had nothing but the highest quality support from the leadership of the Australian
Defence organisation and indeed from the government ... and I've also felt that support
from the public and the media," he said.
"I don't think there's been a recent military operation which has had as much support."
AAP fh/pjs/arb/de
KEYWORD: DEFENCE COSGROVE
2000 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Fed: Retail code of practice not strong enough small grocers
AAP General News (Australia)
12-18-1999
Fed: Retail code of practice not strong enough small grocers
The federal government has been accused of buckling under pressure from the major retail
chains for failing to put teeth into a code of conduct for the retailing industry.
The government's response to the report of a parliamentary inquiry into retailing came
down on the side of a voluntary code of practice.
It also preferred only voluntary notification of retail store acquisitions by publicly
listed corporations.
The committee, headed by Liberal MP BRUCE BAIRD, had supported mandatory requirements
on both counts.
The National Association of Retail Grocers of Australia says the government's response
is a major victory for the big end of town and its economic rationalist supporters.
NARGA spokesman ALAN McKENZIE says the government has opposed sensible and important
recommendations.
AAP RTV dep/msk/smf
KEYWORD: RETAIL (CANBERRA)
1999 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
FED: States want an excuse to do nothing on health PM
AAP General News (Australia)
08-06-1999
FED: States want an excuse to do nothing on health PM
By Rod McGuirk
CANBERRA, Aug 6 AAP - A Productivity Commission inquiry into Medicare would be an excuse
for governments to do nothing about public health problems for the next 18 months, Prime
Minister John Howard said today.
Mr Howard repeated his refusal to hold such an inquiry into the health system despite an
unanimous request last month from the states and territories.
"It will be an excuse for all governments around Australia to say: 'Oh we can't respond to
that idea because we're waiting on the results of an inquiry," Mr Howard told Melbourne radio
3AW.
"The Australian public gets very cynical of governments who have another inquiry into
something - I think that is just an excuse for putting off doing anything about some of these
issues."
New South Wales Premier Bob Carr and South Australian Premier John Olsen are canvassing
support for a state and territory-driven inquiry if the prime minister refused to relent on a
Productivity Commission investigation.
Tasmanian Premier Jim Bacon said he would seriously consider the premiers' proposal, but
would have preferred to have acted with the commonwealth.
Opposition Leader Kim Beazley blamed Mr Howard and the Liberal premiers for the health
funding shortfall.
He said the premiers had dramaticly reduced public health spending while the federal
government channeled $1.6 billion into subsiding private health insurance premiums.
"The prime minister has effectively undermined the universal system by putting all the
resources that might have resolved the problems of the states ... into a failed policy on
private health contributions," Mr Beazley told journalists.
"Less than half the money would have dealt with the public hospital issue in this country."
Labor health ministers and opposition health spokespeople today called for a Senate inquiry
into public health including the health insurance rebate.
Federal health spokeswoman Jenny Macklin said she had asked Australian Democrats leader Meg
Lees for support.
Mr Howard said everyone seemed to hope a national inquiry would produce some easy solution
to the problems.
The solution that states and territories' wanted was the federal government handing over
more money for public hospitals, he said.
"I get worried there is a constant denigration of the health system," he said.
"There is not a crisis in Australia's national health system. There are problems."
Mr Howard said the states and territories were welcome to hold their own inquiry but
Medicare and private health insurance remained the responsibility of the federal government.
Mr Carr discounted suggestions that a review would hold no weight without federal backing.
"It would lead to recommendations that a federal government would have to take into
account," Mr Carr told reporters.
Meanwhile, the Australian Medical Association (AMA) today called on Australia's largest
health insurer MBF to cancel plans for an American-style managed care insurance scheme in
Queensland and New South Wales.
AMA president David Brand said the no-gaps scheme, which involves two-year contracts for
doctors, would almost certainly send 30 per cent of private hospitals to the wall and limit
treatment to patients.
AAP rmg/sc/arb
KEYWORD: MEDICARE NIGHTLEAD
1999 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
FED: Beazley says Howard behind the game on East Timor = 2
AAP General News (Australia)
02-10-1999
FED: Beazley says Howard behind the game on East Timor = 2
Opposition foreign affairs spokesman LAURIE BRERETON says Mr HOWARD's message sent a
disturbing signal to pro-integrationist militia groups.
Mr BRERETON says Mr HOWARD's confirmation that Australian diplomacy will fully support East
Timor's continued incorporation within Indonesia only encourages para-military thugs seeking
to block East Timorese self-determination.
He says the HOWARD government should also give a clear in-principle commitment for
Australian participation in a United Nations monitoring force for East Timor.
But Mr BEAZLEY's more cautious on this issue.
He says he would be against the overseas deployment of Australian troops unless there's
agreement on the issue within the East Timorese community.
AAP msl/pa/jn
KEYWORD: INDON TIMOR AUST 2 CANBERRA (REOPENS)
1999 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
WA:Cousins reportedly in mental health unit
AAP General News (Australia)
01-14-2012
WA:Cousins reportedly in mental health unit
PERTH, Jan 14 AAP - Ben Cousins has reportedly been admitted to a psychiatric unit
at a Perth hospital.
Fairfax radio quotes a West Australian newspaper reporter as saying the drug-addicted
former AFL star was taken by ambulance to the suburban mental health unit on Friday.
The 33-year-old was admitted on Monday to Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital in the city,
but was on Friday afternoon transferred to the Joondalup Mental Health Care Unit.
Fairfax says Cousins had apparently been displaying paranoid behaviour …
QLD:Toowoomba, Lockyer Valley flood victims
AAP General News (Australia)
01-11-2011
QLD:Toowoomba, Lockyer Valley flood victims
Queensland police have confirmed the following eight victims of flash flooding in Toowoomba
and the Lockyer Valley:
- A woman and child in a vehicle in the Toowoomba CBD
- A woman and two …
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