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Australia: SEP candidate opposes closure of maternity ward
in Sydneys west
By our reporters
2 March 2005
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Mike Head, the Socialist Equality Party candidate for the Werriwa
by-election, spoke at a rally late last month against the closure
of the maternity unit at Camden Hospital. Camden, which lies just
outside the Werriwa electorate in Sydneys outer south western
suburbs, is an area now dominated by new housing estates, occupied
by young working families, usually with large mortgages.
Before the rally, about 1,000 people marched through the centre
of Camden, waving banners and chanting slogans against the imminent
closure. Previous demonstrations against the downgrading of the
hospital had drawn between 400 and 500 people. Nevertheless, the
New South Wales state Labor government headed by Premier Bob Carr
confirmed the closure on the very eve of the march.

Head won warm applause as he voiced his support for the demands
of the community, telling the rally that like every other growing
area, Camden needs a full hospital and full maternity ward.
Labors contempt for the working class had been summed up,
Head noted, by the announcement of the wards closure the
day before the community protest.
Head explained: We have government by lies and deceitat
both the national and state level. At the national level we have
lies from the Howard Liberal government about the Iraq war; at
the state level we have lies from the Labor government about the
reasons for the closure of basic public services. The truth is
that public health is being run down everywhere to boost private
insurers and private health.
He said he was standing in Werriwa for the SEP in order to
put forward a genuine socialist alternative to Labor and
Liberal, which both carry out the requirements of private profit
and the accumulation of wealth at the expense of the needs of
the vast majority of ordinary people.
Rally organiser, local businessman Steve Wisbey, thanked Head
for his speech, saying: I am not a socialist yet, but that
was very interesting.
The Carr government placed the hospitals birthing unit
under review in December, just nine months after an earlier inquiry
had recommended it continue, and less than two years after the
government opened the unit to win votes in the area on the eve
of a state election.
Citing falling numbers of births at the hospital, and the general
shortage across Australia of doctors specialising in obstetrics
and anaesthetics, the review argued that specialist resources
should be concentrated at the larger Campbelltown Hospital, some
15 kilometres away. As a sop to local outrage, it suggested that
a midwifery service re-open at Camden, allowing only women with
low-risk pregnancies to give birth there.
The review began from the standpoint of what is sustainablei.e.,
affordablein a dysfunctional public health system characterised
by inadequate infrastructure, staff shortages and an overall funding
crisis. It ignored the main reason for the decline in birthing
numbers at Camdendeterioration in the standard of care caused
by inadequate funding.
In late 2003, nurses at Campbelltown and Camden hospitals spoke
out against patient safety being seriously compromised at both
facilities due to chronic understaffing. Substandard care was
ultimately blamed for the deaths of 21 people, including Natalia
Lalic, a newborn who died because faulty equipment and untrained
staff prevented an emergency caesarean being performed.
The intense media coverage of the scandal ensured that a number
of pregnant women were reluctant to use either Camden or Campbelltown.
The recommendation to consolidate the available specialists at
Campbelltown does nothing to redress the underlying cause of the
problems.
If and when the midwifery service commences, women who seek
to give birth at Camden will have to go elsewhere if complications
arise. Campbelltown Hospital is approximately 20 to 30 minutes
away by car. Liverpool Hospital, the next closest facility, is
even further.
Aggravating the potential for tragedy is the fact that Narellan
Road, the main connection between Camden and Campbelltown, is
prone to heavy traffic. As expectant mother Rachel Costa told
the Sydney Morning Herald: To be quite honest, giving
birth at Campbelltown scares me. I have quick labours and Narellan
Road is a disaster at the best of times. I am actually stressing
a little bit and quite scared of being stuck giving birth on the
side of the road.
Speaking to the WSWS before the Camden rally, Lorrayne Peacey
from Elderslie was bitterly opposed not only to the closure of
the maternity unit at Camden Hospital but the deterioration of
the public hospital system nationally. She said Camden Hospital
had been marvellous when she had two children there
more than a decade ago. Now, it was being run down, despite a
crying need for maternity services for the growing population
of Camden and its outlying areas.
She had personally experienced the appalling state of the public
hospitals throughout Sydneys western suburbs. She waited
four years for an operation at nearby Campbelltown Hospital. Once
when she required urgent hospitalisation two years ago, medical
staff had been unable to locate a bed for her, including in the
major teaching hospitals at Liverpool and Penrith.
The public hospitals are getting no support at all from
governments, Peacey said. For the sake of people and
our society, the hospitals have to be funded in order to encourage
medical staff back into the system.
The population within Camden Council, which is currently 48,000,
may grow by more than 150,000 over the next 20 years. Housing
subdivisions are being developed around Elderslie, Spring Farm,
Mount Annan and Harrington Park, while there are plans to construct
at least 30,000 new homes in Bringelly.
In the main, the new residents will be young couples buying
their first home and intending to start families. To meet the
basic requirements for the population, the state must provide
not only vastly expanded health services, but new child-care centres,
schools, parklands, recreation facilities, public transport and
other basic services.
The exact opposite is taking place however. For more than two
decades, both Labor and conservative governments have lowered
business taxes and gutted social services in an effort to meet
corporate demands for Australia to be internationally competitive.
The millions of ordinary people who cannot afford to pay for
private health and education are being left with second-class
services. This has been highlighted by further revelations about
the conditions confronting doctors, nurses and patients at Campbelltown
Hospital.
Staff shortages have forced the closure of four beds in the
surgical gynaecology ward, and 10 beds in paediatrics over the
last month. An internal hospital memo from early February, obtained
by the local newspaper, the Campbelltown-Macarthur Advertiser,
stated that nurses from the wards needed to be redeployed
to assist areas that now have substantial gaps in their rosters.
The wards with the gaps included coronary care, intensive care,
peri-operative and surgical short stay units.
A nurse, who declined to be named, warned of the implications
for patients safety: General nurses are required to
perform extra shifts in other areas which, although they are fully
qualified nurses, do not have the necessary experience to work
in those different wards. After a double shift, the nurses are
tired and exhausted and its not safe work practice.
See Also:
Australia: SEP launches Werriwa
by-election campaign
[28 February 2005]
Socialist Equality Party
stands in Australian by-election
Support the socialist alternative in Werriwa
[25 February 2005]
Socialist Equality Party to
contest Australian by-election
[15 February 2005]
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