Monday, 21 December 2009
Doctor unease over crash victim drug tests
Doctors are concerned about a new push for hospital staff to test all people injured in road accidents for drugs, so they can report the results to police.
For the past six months, Victoria Police has been asking doctors and nurses in emergency departments to take blood from people involved in collisions, including passengers, cyclists and pedestrians, so they can test them for cannabis, methamphetamines, benzodiazepines and alcohol.
The move has attracted criticism from some doctors who say it is time-consuming, increases the risk of needle-stick injuries, and could deter injured people from seeking treatment because they fear police involvement.
According to the Road Safety Act, any person over the age of 15 who goes to hospital after a motor vehicle accident must allow a doctor or nurse to take their blood. If they refuse they can be charged with an offence similar to refusing a breath test.
Until July, people involved in car accidents were tested only for alcohol in hospitals. The inclusion of a drug test is part of a campaign to reduce road trauma after research showed 20 per cent of the 332 people who died on Victorian roads last year had illicit drugs in their blood.
Instructions recently sent to hospitals said although the primary purpose of the practice was to reduce road trauma, if there was any doubt about who was driving during a collision, samples should be taken from everyone.
The document also asks that pedestrians and bicyclists be tested ''for the purposes of devising and evaluating programs'' for these groups.
The president of the Victorian branch of the Australasian College for Emergency Medicine, David Eddey, said although college members mostly supported a crackdown on drugged drivers, the policy raised a number of concerns.
He said it might not always be possible to talk to patients about the blood test. There was also potential for people to fear hospitals because the results would be sent to police.
''It's possible people won't come to hospital if they know they will have their blood tested,'' he said.
Dr Eddey said some doctors were also worried about the time involved, given the increasing demands on hospitals.
''It's quite a cumbersome process to take the blood,'' he said. ''It's not like taking a blood sample and sending it off to a lab. You have to take it from a separate needle and then you have to fill out forms, stick labels on things and store it in a special locked-up safe.''
Edward Ogden, Victoria Police's principal medical adviser, said police were working with hospital staff to try to streamline the process.
He said the practice was not focused on pursuing people who took drugs, but rather to inform the community that driving under the influence of drugs was a serious issue.
''This is about getting the message to the community that if you take drugs, have a prang and go to hospital, we'll know you have drugs in your system, so don't do it. This is about road safety,'' he said.
The president of Liberty Victoria, Michael Pearce, SC, said the law was reasonable, but should ensure people were not charged with other drug offences if they were innocently involved in a collision and not the cause of it. ''The law should provide that the test results are not used for any offence, except for the offence of driving under the influence,'' he said.
!!!
Not a thing to say but Burrough's comment about a "nation of finks" come to mind...
Hello Dan it's Joe here, I hope you are keeping well / It's the 21st of December now they're ringing the last bell
Paul Kelly - 'How To Make Gravy' Live 17th November 2006.
Make Poverty History concert Myer Music Bowl Melbourne.
"Hello Dan, it's Joe here
I hope you're keeping well
Its the 21st of December
now theyre ringing the last bell
if I get good behaviour
I'll be out of here by July
Won't you kiss my kids on Christmas day
Pleeeease don't let them cry for me
I guess the brothers are driving down from Queensland and Stella's
flying in from the coast
They say it's gonna be a hundred degrees, even more maybe, but that
won't stop the roast
Who's gonna make the gravy now?
I bet it won't taste the same
Just add flour, salt, a little red wine and don't forget a dollop of
tomato sauce for sweetness and that extra tang
And give my love to Angus and to Frank and Dolly,
Tell 'em all I'm sorry I screwed up this time
And look after Rita, I'll be thinking of her early Christmas morning
When I'm standing in line
I hear Mary's got a new boyfriend, I hope he can hold his own
Do you remember the last one? What was his name again?
(Just a little too much cologne)
And Roger, you know I'm even gonna miss Roger
'Cause there's sure as hell no one in here I want to fight
Oh praise the Baby Jesus, have a Merry Christmas,
I'm really gonna miss it, all the treasure and the trash
And later in the evening, I can just imagine,
You'll put on Junior Murvin and push the tables back
And you'll dance with Rita, I know you really like her,
Just don't hold her too close, oh brother please don't stab me in the
back
I didn't mean to say that, it's just my mind it plays up,
Multiplies each matter, turns imagination into fact
You know I love her badly, she's the one to save me,
I'm gonna make some gravy, I'm gonna taste the fat
Tell her that I'm sorry, yeah I love her badly, tell 'em all I'm
sorry,
And kiss the sleepy children for me
You know one of these days, I'll be making gravy,
I'll be making plenty, I'm gonna pay 'em all back."
(Paul Kelly)
The best Xmas song ever.
Get it
HERE (mp3)
HERE (FLAC)
(NB: There are different bonus live versions in each file)
A joke for the Spacebubs (when he is out of nappies)
Q: What's pink and wrinkly and hangs out your pyjamas?
A: Your mum.
A: Your mum.
Sunday, 20 December 2009
Iran cleric Montazeri dies
Montazeri, 87, was an architect of the 1979 Islamic revolution who fell out with the present leadership. He had been held under house arrest for several years. "Hossein Ali Montazeri passed away in his home last night," the official IRNA news agency said on Sunday. He lived in the city of Qom, which lies south of Tehran, and was referred to as the spiritual leader of the opposition after the country's recent disputed election. Ghanbar Naderi, an Iran Daily journalist, told Al Jazeera: "This is huge blow to the reformist camp, because he is unreplaceable and nobody is happy to hear about his sad demise. "He used to say that religion should be separated from politics, because in this way, we can keep the integrity of religion intact." Non-conformist In August, Montazeri described the clerical establishment as a "dictatorship", saying that the authorities' handling of street unrest after the disputed election in June "could lead to the fall of the regime". "I hope the responsible authorities give up the deviant path they are pursuing and restore the trampled rights of the people," he wrote. "I hope authorities ... have the courage to announce that this ruling system is neither a republic nor Islamic and that nobody has the right to express opinion or criticism," Montazeri said in August this year. Alireza Ronaghi, Al Jazeera's correspondent in Tehran, said that Montazeri's statements were significant because he was once in line to succeed the late Ayatollah Khomeini as Iran's supreme leader. But Seyed Mohammad Marandi, a political analyst at the University of Tehran, told Al Jazeera in August that Montazeri has been "saying the same thing for around 25 years". "After his inner circle was discovered to be linked to Mujahedin terrorists based in Iraq, he was isolated by the reformists," he said. "He is not a major player and has always been very critical," Marandi said. |
John Terry for sale
...and news that Chelsea are interested in Torres for 60 million quid!
BASTARDS!
(Sorry Longy!)
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