|
Doctors Reform Society of Australia | |||
|
supporting health care reforms to ensure justice, equity and quality care for all |
||||
| | What's New | About Us | Articles | Letters | Journal | Search | Media Releases | Policies | Links | Discussion Board | | ||||
6.1 Healthy Public Policy
6.1.1 The DRS believes the goal of healthy public policy is to
create a supportive environment to enable people to lead healthy lives.
In pursuit of this goal, all government sectors, including agriculture,
trade, education, industry, communications, environment, housing and public
works, need to take account of health as an essential factor during policy
formulation. Adequate attention should be given to health consequences
and not only economic considerations as health is an essential foundation
to any society and a fundamental human right.
6.1.2 The DRS believes healthy public policy should aim to close
the health gap between the disadvantaged and the more advantaged in society.
Equal access to health services for equal need, in particular community
health care is a vital aspect of equity in health. Community action
is central to the fostering of public health policy.
6.2 Health Promotion
6.2.1 The DRS endorses programs which incorporate:
i. the creation of environments which support health;
ii. the development of personal skills;
iii. the strengthening of community action;
iv. increased emphasis on preventive measures within
health services;
v. health promotion within the community both broad-based
and targeted at specific groups;
vi. cultural appropriateness for the target group;
vii. peer education;
viii. the building of healthy public policy.
6.2.2 The DRS believes health services should contribute to preventive
programs along with treatment and care of medical conditions. Health
workers need to be trained in communicating about health promotion and
incorporating various educative tools and techniques.
6.2.3 The DRS calls for more research into social and economic
influences on health in Australia and calls for properly conducted trials
to determine the effectiveness of health promotion programs in line with
evidence based principles.
6.2.4 The DRS recognises the risks to health of contemporary
life-styles and supports the promotion of a healthy life-style.
6.2.5 The DRS recognises the benefits to health of properly conducted
mass screening programs. The DRS supports the use of properly instituted
mass screening programs and the introduction of future programs which will
help reduce the impact of disease and be cost effective.
6.2.6 The DRS supports harm minimisation as an integral part
of health promotion.
6.2.7 The DRS believes that the media is prone to exaggerate
the impact of therapeutic measures against disease. The DRS believes
the media should adopt a code of practice that avoids sensationalism and
encouraging misplaced hopes, and instead aims to help people become more
aware of what they can do to promote their own health and that of their
fellow Australians.
6.3 Tobacco, Alcohol and other Drug Use
6.3.1 The DRS believes prevention and harm minimisation should
be the central principle underlying Australian policies with regard to
drug and alcohol use. Much greater emphasis should be given to public
health strategies than to law enforcement justice approaches.
6.3.2 The DRS recognises that of all licit and illicit drugs,
the use of alcohol and tobacco result in the greatest physical, psychological
and social costs to the Australian community.
6.3.3 The DRS calls for a legislative ban on the promotion (through
sponsorship and advertising) of tobacco and alcohol use.
6.3.4 The DRS calls for an increased diversion of revenue raised
from alcohol and tobacco taxes towards strategies that aim to minimise
the harms arising from the use of these drugs.
6.3.5 The DRS recognises that the abuse of prescription drugs
contributes significantly to drug related harm. Prescribers have
a key responsibility in preventing prescription drug abuse. Attention
should be given to education and training of both prescribers and the community,
monitoring mechanisms and structural factors in the medical workforce that
contribute to prescription drug abuse.
6.3.6 The DRS recognises that a considerable amount of the harm
associated with illicit drugs arises from the illegal status of these substances.
In particular, serious consideration should be given to the legal status
of all currently illicit substances including the decriminalisation of
cannabis and controlled heroin or substitution drug trials.
6.3.7 The DRS supports the promotion and
adequate resourcing of prevention, early intervention and effective treatments
for individuals with drug related problems. These should include counselling
services, residential treatment services and substitution pharmacotherapies
for opioid and psychostimulant dependent people.
6.3.8 The DRS supports the promotion and
adequate resourcing of strategies that reduce the transmission of blood
borne viruses (including HIV, Hepatitis B and C) in the high risk population
of injecting drug users. This should include free Hepatitis B vaccination
for at risk users. In addition the DRS supports the expansion and
adequate funding of primary and secondary needle syringe exchange services
including the provision of these services in all hospital emergency departments
and in the prison setting. (see also Prisons
10.4 and HIV/PLWAIDS 11.3.5 and 11.3.6)
6.4 Nutrition
The DRS supports:
6.4.1 The continuing development and implementation of national
nutrition policy.
6.4.2 Stringent food and hygiene standards monitored by federal
government inspectors and not by the food processing industry.
6.4.3 Compulsory content labelling of food, including clear identification
of additives, genetically manipulated food stuffs, fat, sugar, salt and
animal content and whether irradiation has occurred.
6.4.4 Access to healthy foods for all people. There should be
no financial or geographical barriers.
6.4.5 Measures to increase successful breastfeeding including
accreditation of "Baby Friendly" maternity hospitals and restrictions on
the promotion of breast milk substitutes.
6.4.6 Measures to improve prenatal nutrition.
6.4.7 Nutritional education from an early age.
6.4.8 Healthy food policies for school tuckshops.
6.4.9 Tight restrictions on the advertising of sweetened drinks,
foods and confectionery to children (eg in the media, sports events, school
fund raising).
6.5 Immunisation
6.5.1 The DRS believes that the community benefits of routine
childhood immunisation significantly outweigh the risks to individual vaccine
recipients.
6.5.2 The DRS believes that parents/guardians need good access
to information regarding the comparative risks and benefits of immunisation.
6.5.3 The DRS supports current National Health and Medical Research
Council immunisation regimens as minimal requirements.
6.5.4 The DRS supports the role of general practitioners, nurses
and health workers as immunisation providers.
6.5.5 The DRS supports the involvement of Federal, State, and
Local governments in initiatives which improve access to and provide incentives
for routine childhood immunisations.
6.5.6 The DRS believes that child care centres which provide
care for children too young to have been fully immunised should be able
to exclude older unimmunised children.
6.5.7 The DRS believes that, except during outbreaks of vaccine-preventable
disease, unimmunised children should be allowed to attend school if their
parents have been counselled and maintain objection to immunisation
6.6. Housing and Habitat
6.6.1 The DRS believes people have the right to live in safe
and acceptable housing. Housing should be developed with attention
to the environmental and architectural effects on social and community
development.
6.6.2 The DRS believes that with the involvement of residents,
environmental, social and architectural principles should be applied to
the mitigation of existing problems in inappropriate developments such
as some high density multi-story housing.
6.6.3 The DRS believes incentives need to be enacted to encourage
the use of renewable energy sources and to maximise recycling. Building
materials should be selected which will not place residents at risk. (see
also Environmental Health 13.6 and 13.11)
6.6.4 The DRS supports the expansion of low cost publicly
owned housing.
| . |
|
. |
The Doctors Reform Society of Australia,
Box 14, 4 Goulburn Street, Sydney 2000.
Phone 02 9264-9084 Fax 02 9267-4393. |
. |
| This page was last updated on 29th January, 2003. | ||||
| Articles Menu | Conferences | What's New | Home Page | Top of Page | ||||