Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeGazetteWaiting game

Waiting game

CASEY Council has had, and I am sure will face more, significant challenges in providing its maternal and child health service.
Four thousand babies are born in Casey a year and that soon will be 5000. The next highest birth rate for a municipality is half that.
My View (Gazette, 31 January) mentioned the extraordinary attack on Casey MCH service by Narre Warren North MP Luke Donnellan and Casey deputy mayor Kevin Bradford. Why this attack? Why not call for urgent discussions on ways and means of overcoming the problem?
Reports show that the MCH service has been in trouble because it was unable through normal process to acquire enough nurses to cope with the sudden birth increase.
A costly recruitment program for nurses was instituted and appears to have been successful, at least in the short term.
Cr Bradford repeatedly said that councillors were not advised of acute nurse shortages. And Mr Donnellan said councillors were not updated on the situation for more than a year. I recall the last report just over a year ago and like the councillors I let it pass, but we did know there was a shortage of nurses.
My concern is that Cr Bradford was advised about the situation two weeks before his employer made a public attack on the MCH administration.
His main concern was that the council had introduced a questionnaire for parents in order to compile data about toddler progress. This is used during later consultation with nurses based on a waiting list. Illness and serious problems would be referred to a doctor.
Nothing has changed in the service to mums with babies less than one year old because the nursing team, albeit understaffed, maintained this part of the service.
Cr Bradford said the questionnaire did not comply with the service guidelines. Nevertheless, it appears the questionnaire has been successful and the State Government may use it.
My concern is what is behind Cr Bradford’s, and to a lesser extent Mr Donnellan’s, attack on staff when their role is to support and, perhaps, counsel. In a series of questions to community services director Jennie Lee, Cr Bradford demanded to know why councillors were not advised of the crisis. He also claimed in a letter to the editor, 7 February 2007, that: “One question for Mr Mynard to answer, if he can, is that as a councillor, would I have been notified of the situation of MCH services had it not been reported in the press? I think not.”
Well, I can answer.
Two weeks before Mr Donnellan’s public attack on the council, the acting director of community services Sophia Petrov, briefed Cr Bradford on the situation (see page 9).
Cr Bradford works in Mr Donnellan’s office and if he didn’t instigate the press release he must have known it was coming. Ms Lee did not use Ms Petrov’s report in her defence during Cr Bradford’s questioning probably because she wasn’t aware it existed because she had been on leave.
This debate highlights the fact that Casey MCH nurses are making an enormous contribution because they have maintained a wonderful service for nearly 4000 infants a year.
Officers introduced a questionnaire system for older children to help cope with an extreme nurse shortage and it appears to have worked, except for some who complained to Cr Bradford and perhaps Mr Donnellan.
The Casey MCH has 40,000 families on its books and 4000 babies a year who must be seen immediately. No one could convince me that with any amount of staff there would not be some complaints about the service, justified or not, yet Cr Bradford launched his attack based on two complaints because mothers of toddlers were placed on a waiting list.

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

Former Casey Mayor diagnosed with MND

Ex two-time Casey Mayor and VFL footballer Geoff Ablett has been diagnosed with Motor Neurone Disease (MND), prompting his family to launch a fundraising...
More News

State Government promises new emergency facilities for Casey Hospital

With the official plans for the expansion of Casey’s emergency department debuted, the state government is progressing on its $280 million project, with Icon...

Aged care security breached

Millhaven Lodge, a residential aged care facility in Pakenham, has updated security codes and restricted access points after a series of breaches that compromised...

Garlic Festival showcase

The South Gippsland Garlic Festival - Victoria’s biggest celebration of Australian garlic - is back for its second year at Korumburra Showgrounds on Saturday...

Parks Victoria launches major statewide recruitment drive

The search is on for Victoria's next generation of rangers, with outdoor enthusiasts encouraged to apply for one of 62 new roles across the...

2026 duck season bag limit

The Victorian Government has set a daily bag limit of nine ducks per hunter for the 2026 duck hunting season. The season length, as set...

Volunteers transform historic grounds

Around 30 volunteers rolled up their sleeves on Wednesday, 28 January, for the 61st Annual Berwick Cemetery Clean Up. Rotarians, Berwick and Harkaway Cemetery...

Calls for more foster parents as crisis mounts in Victoria

Lynn, a Casey local, stumbled on a television commercial about foster care at 65 years old, peaking her interest, the Tongan-born mother of five,...

Children’s ‘innocent’ ribbons and signs vandalised at Berwick Springs Lake

Ribbons made by children at Berwick Springs Lake, now named Guru Nanak Lake, were vandalised earlier this year promoting disappointment from a community group. Children’s ribbons...

Fourth attack in weeks rocks Heritage Church

Still reeling from earlier vandalism and attempted break-ins, Lang Lang’s St John’s Anglican Church has been hit for a fourth time, despite increased patrols. It...

People in Profile: Ensuring days end with a smile

From Officer City Soccer Club to Yakkerboo, Pakenham’s Brijal Parikh does it all, and he does it just to put smiles on faces. Gazette...