The safety of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children must be a national priority

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ChildFund Australia works in developing countries to create community and systems change which enables vulnerable children and young people, in all their diversity, to assert and realise their rights.

While we do not deliver programs in Australia at this stage, as a child-focused development organisation we are committed to ending violence against children globally in all its forms. The ChildFund Alliance actively contributed to the positioning of Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) target 16.2 as a core element within the 2030 agenda.

Many Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders community leaders have said that the Black Lives Matter protests across the United States reflect a similar history and story of persistent injustice. We hope that the recent protests occurring across Australia are the beginning of a renewed public conversation.

ChildFund has decades of experience working with children and young people in disadvantaged communities and has gained valuable insights.

We understand the fundamental importance of children feeling connected to their communities and living in an environment which is free from harm, including institutionalised violence.

In Australia, the extent to which Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander young people experience police violence, and the rate at which they are being incarcerated, has reached a crisis point. This has been verified by multiple public commissions and inquiries.

We know that feeling safe is critical to a child’s healthy physical and emotional development. A child growing up in an environment where they feel protected is more likely to do well at school, have healthy social relationships with friends and family, and achieve economic independence as adults.

In our work globally, ChildFund’s programs address the root causes of inequality. We know that history matters.

Australia’s past includes a series of failed policies that have caused intergenerational stress for thousands of Aboriginal mothers, fathers, children and their elders.

Today, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children and young people continue to experience stark disadvantage in comparison to their non-Indigenous peers. This includes higher rates of poverty and infant mortality, poorer health, shorter life expectancy, and lower levels of education and employment.

As of February 2020, Australia is only on track for two out of its seven Close the Gap targets.

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children belong to living cultures that have been maintained for over 60,000 years. There is deep knowledge about ways forward – we in Australia must be committed to careful listening.

ChildFund unequivocally supports the Uluru Statement and the Redfern Statement. We view the voices of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander young people as profoundly important in designing Australia’s future.

In addition to current efforts, we call on the Australian Government to make the safety and wellbeing of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children an urgent, national priority through concrete commitments to comprehensive child protection and youth justice reform.

We also call on all Australians to continue these conversations in your homes and to engage in the emerging public discourse, led by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander community leaders, elders, and young people.

More importantly, we encourage you to deeply listen to the stories and experiences of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders community leaders and young people.

 

New report shows of decades of progress in child health outcomes are at risk as vaccination and health programs halted.

A new report released by ChildFund Australia today warns that there may be an explosion of infectious diseases in Papua New Guinea as a result of the diversion of health resources to the COVID-19 response.

The ChildFund report also warns the already overwhelmed health system in PNG will struggle if there is a significant outbreak of COVID-19.

ChildFund Australia CEO Margaret Sheehan said “We are deeply concerned that more children may end up contracting preventable diseases like TB, polio and measles because they haven’t been vaccinated during the pandemic.

“Children haven’t been the face of the pandemic, but the collateral damage of COVID-19 means they are at serious risk of suffering serious long-term health consequences as a result.

“PNG already has dangerously low levels of vaccination, and has fewer than 1,000 doctors. For many years now it has been struggling to deal with an ongoing tuberculosis epidemic.

“Prevention and containment measures in response to COVID-19 are essential, but we are concerned that it comes at the cost of sacrificing other life-saving health programs, such as vaccinations, health screening and outreach programs in remote areas.”

The collateral damage of the COVID-19 response in the Asia Pacific includes:

  • Halting of immunisation campaigns by government agencies and NGOs due to lockdown measures and social distancing rules.
  • Fewer women in PNG are seeking to give birth in clinics, putting the lives of themselves and their newborns at risk
  • An interruption to global pharmaceutical supply chains is resulting in a shortage of medicines in many rural healthcare clinics
  • Travel restrictions are preventing patients in rural areas from seeking treatment for diseases such as tuberculosis. Where TB treatment programs are interrupted, there is the risk of a significant increase in multi-drug resistance tuberculosis, which is extremely costly to treat.
  • Bed net distribution to rural communities, which helps prevent malaria infections, has reduced in favour of COVID-19 response activities such as supplies of hand sanitiser.

“We don’t want countries like PNG to have to decide between a COVID-19 outbreak and essential health programs. That is a terrible choice to have to make – but that is the reality right now given their shortage of both health facilities and staff.

“Ongoing Australian Government support is even more important now to prevent the outbreak of infectious diseases on our doorstep.”

ChildFund Australia Health Advisor Tracy Yuen said 18 years after the disease was officially eradicated, polio re-emerged in PNG in 2018 due to low levels of immunisation. This was controlled through an intensive, large-scale vaccination initiative, but came at significant cost to the country.

“ChildFund Australia’s report shows that the COVID-19 pandemic could undo decades of gains in combatting infectious diseases, child mortality and maternal health in Papua New Guinea.

“Even when the immediate danger of COVID-19 is behind us, the global recession could mean many countries may not have the funds to adequately resource their health programs.

“For the children living in the remote and rural communities of PNG, without nearby access to healthcare, immunisation programs and outreach health clinics can ensure vulnerable children both survive and thrive.”

The report can be downloaded here.