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Thursday, 08 January 2009

Fears for ambos taking on dangerous police duties

4/12/2008 7:08:00 AM.  | Edwina Bartholomew
There are fears for the safety of NSW Ambulance Officers, forced to transfer mentally ill patients between hospitals because police will no longer do it.

Police have already withdrawn the service from city areas and will do the same in rural areas from the beginning of February.

Shadow Minister for Mental Health Greg Aplin says even the government has acknowledged paramedics will struggle.

“There are no mechanical restraint devices rolled out in time in these ambulances – it does pose a problem for paramedics,” he told LIVENEWS.com.au.

“They haven’t undergone the correct training and that won’t happen, according to the government letter, until 2011.”

COMMENTS

Thursday, 04 December 2008

Yes but it more pressure on the ambos and that is not their duty, give the police more money and get more police to do these duties instead of moving work around from one department to another to try and save a bit of money, that in the long run is wasted because the stupid idea doesnot work. Jan

Posted by: Jan Baker, Bangor

 

Friday, 05 December 2008

Well, at least there will be 88 more of them now the task of Rescue has been rightly and permanently given to the NSW Fire BrigadB. It is their duty to look after patients and their transport. (After all they are glorified taxi drivers with a little bit of first aid knowledge! Let them carry out their core role of patient transport.

Posted by: ben doon, Pendle hill

Tuesday, 16 December 2008

ben doon, what rock have you been hiding under for the past twenty years? "Glorified taxi drivers with a little bit of first aid knowledge?" Please. Try 4 1/2 years tertiary training with a post graduate qualification. If you or a loved one needed an ambulance, urgently, pray that they're not all otherwise occupied transferring mental health patients, and be grateful that our paramedics have much more training than a first aid certificate!

Posted by: Dave Novotny, Ballarat

 

Friday, 05 December 2008

Its fair better that a health professional is involved as the person responsible for the provision of care to a mentally ill patient than a police officer, after all mental illness is not a crime, it needs a theraputic approach. Patients with mental health issues are frequently medically unwell or have the potential to have concealed problems such as a overdose. I agree that police should be involved when there actual risk of violence is high, but as part of a team response led by a clinican

Posted by: David Johno, Brisbane

 
 

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