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⫸STICKY⫷ Harm Reduction Contacts

^not a very good data base - out of date and incomplete. Each state has its own telephone/web service database (eg Direct Line in Victoria 1800 888 236) which will be live and complete
 
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Needle and Syringe Programs in Queensland

Needle and Syringe Programs in Queensland

http://www.health.qld.gov.au/qnsp/

Scroll down to the bottom and there are five location guides.

The maps will also indicate if a program is Primary (full range of injecting equipment), Secondary (mainly packs), and if it has a vending machine.
 
'Our C-ciety' Hepatitis C Online Peer Support and Information

'Our C-ciety' Hepatitis C Peer Support and Information



http://www.c-ciety.ning.com



‘Our C-ciety’, developed by AIVL (Australian Injecting and Illicit Drug Users League), is Australia’s only social networking site specifically for people living with hepatitis C who have a history of injecting drug use and/or are on a pharmacotherapy program, such as methadone or suboxone. And for those who have completed hepatitis C treatment.

As a peer-based, confidential safe space ‘Our C-ciety’ allows people to ask questions, share experiences, voice concerns and learn about the latest updates in hepatitis C treatment, research, health and legal rights – with doctors available to answer those tricky medical questions about injecting, hepatitis C and pharmacotherapy.
 
How to make a complaint against GP/Health Professionals.

source

How to make a complaint
by Peter Lavelle
The Australian medical system, what to do and who to go to if something goes wrong.
Published 20/02/2003

ISTOCKPHOTO
Your rights
Complaint options
Litigation
Health Ombudsmen
More info
In a perfect world every time we sought help from a health professional we'd be 100 per cent satisfied with how we were treated.

But the world isn't perfect, and like any provider of a service, doctors make mistakes. These mistakes can range from unprofessional behaviour to incompetence or simply a momentary lapse in judgement where the doctor makes a poor decision.

It's important not to accept poor treatment, but to make a complaint about it. This doesn't just benefit you the consumer, it's also in the community's interests because it means there's less likelihood of someone else experiencing the same problem in the future.

Your rights

Health consumers have rights that guarantee them:

a satisfactory service.
dignity and privacy.
adequate information.
due skill.
treatment in a professional manner.
the right to redress if these measures aren't met.
These rights are covered by codes of conduct and are backed up by legislation – for example the Medical Practice Acts in each State, the Trade Practices Act, and common laws related to personal injury.

In the past, when health consumers have taken action against medial practitioners, the professional bodies and the courts tended to favour doctors rather than patients.

For years there's been a reluctance on the part of the medical profession to admit to doctors' mistakes and act on them. Nevertheless the rise of the consumer movement over the past 20 years or so have made consumers much more aware of their rights.

Making a complaint is an important way of weeding out and re-educating health providers who are unprofessional or incompetent.The most common complaints patients make relate to:

poor treatment – misdiagnosis, wrong or inadequate treatment.
inadequate provision of information – for example about the diagnosis or treatment.
inappropriate nature of the relationship (a sexual relationship for example).
impairment of the doctor due to drugs or alcohol.
A smaller number involve administrative matters like lack of access to medical records, long waiting times, rude staff and so on.

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Complaint options

If the doctor is employed by a medical practice or hospital, the complaint should be made there in the first instance. The doctor should be given the opportunity to respond.

If you are not satisfied, or the complaint is serious enough, you can make a complaint to the health care ombudsman in your State. This is a person whose job it is to handle complaints about health care providers. Each State has one, though they go under different names.

If you are in Western Australia contact the Office of Health Review; in Queensland, the Health Rights Commission, in the Northern Territory the Health and Community Services Complaints Commission, in the ACT the Health Complaints Commission, Victoria, the Health Services Commissioner, and, in New South Wales, the Health Care Complaints Commission. Contact details are listed below.

You should call them and discuss the problem over the phone, and then submit the complaint in writing.

If they feel the complaint is unjustified or frivolous, they may dismiss it. Otherwise, depending on the nature of the complaint they may deal with it in different ways.

For example they may refer it to their dispute resolution service. This is a forum in which patients and doctors are encouraged to come together and discuss and resolve their differences. It may result in an apology from the doctor for example.

In more serious cases the complaint may be referred to another regulatory body for investigation.

In cases involving professional misconduct or where there is a question mark over the skill of the health practitioner, this might be the medical board.

Each State and Territory in Australia has a medical act which outlines the conditions under which medical practitioners are allow to practice. The acts are administered by State medical boards.

A board may investigate a doctor via a medical tribunal or professional conduct hearing, and if found guilty, the doctor may disciplined by a fines, suspension, the imposition of conditions on practice, or deregistration.

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Litigation

If you feel you have been injured by a health professional you also have the option of suing that person.

Under common law, a person has the right to sue a health provider for failing to exercise reasonable skill and care in their diagnosis, and treatment, and for failure to provide adequate information about their treatment. That person can seek damages for injuries.

Those damages might include a sum of money to cover medical expenses (past, present and future), loss of income due to disability, expenses to cover nursing and domestic help, and an amount for the pain and suffering experienced.

The plaintiff (the person bringing the complaint) has to be able to prove that the doctor acted negligently, and that the negligence caused the injury. This can be difficult because:

the direct link between the procedure and the damage is sometimes difficult to prove.
to prove negligence, the plaintiff must prove the doctor breached his or her duty of care. Expert witnesses must give an opinion that what the doctor did was outside of normal acceptable practice. These experts are other doctors who may be reluctant to testify against members of their own profession. Even if they testify the conduct was normal practise, the court may still find the doctor negligent.
For the plaintiff, losing the case can be costly, because the court may order the plaintiff to pay the doctor's court costs as well as the plaintiff's.

If the doctor loses, the costs don't come out of the doctor's pocket. Doctors must have professional negligence insurance (known as medical indemnity insurance) to be able to practice, and the insurance company makes the payout.

Most cases don't go to court, because both sides usually settle out of court. Those cases that do go to court (about 10 per cent) are usually the ones that the doctor's medical insurance company thinks has a good chance of winning and will pursue to the end.

Studies have shown that a person who believes they have suffered from malpractice is much more likely to sue if they think:

the doctor is hiding information from them.
the doctor won't apologise and admit they've made a mistake.
nothing is being done to ensure the mistake isn't repeated.
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Health Ombudsmen

VICTORIA
Office of the Health Services Commissioner Freecall™ 1800 136 066

NEW SOUTH WALES
Health Care Complaints Commission Freecall™ 1800 043 159 (within NSW)

QUEENSLAND
Health Rights Commission Freecall™ 1800 077 308 (within Queensland excluding Brisbane)Brisbane 07 3234 0272)

SOUTH AUSTRALIA
The SA Ombudsman Tollfree 1800 182 150

WESTERN AUSTRALIA
Office of Health Review Freecall™ 1800 813 583 (within WA)

TASMANIA
Health Complaints Commissioner Tollfree™ 1800 001 170 (within Tasmania)

ACT
ACT Community and Health Services Complaints Commissioner Telephone (02) 6205 2222

NORTHERN TERRITORY
Commissioner for Health & Community Services Complaints Freecall™ 1800 806 380
 
Dunno if these numbers have been posted before, they apply, well some, to NSW from memory. Here goes:

splash.jpg


NSW Users & Aids Association Inc

The NSW Users & AIDS Association’s (NUAA) is a not-for-profit NSW-based organisation advocating for people who use drugs, particularly those who inject drugs. The peak drug user organisation in NSW, NUAA was formed in 1989 in the face of a growing HIV epidemic. A group of drug users, their friends, families and supporters established NUAA as an independent, user-driven community-based organisation.

Funded primarily by the NSW Health Department, NUAA provides education, practical support, information and advocacy to users of illicit drugs, their friends, and allies. NUAA has often led the way in developing innovative approaches to peer education and community development, and has contributed to Australia having one of the lowest HIV rates amongst injecting drug users in the world.

They are a very active Australian organisation and publish a quarterly magazine called User's News which is freely available by subscription or at your local NSP.

Ash. <3
 
^i think i've seen that at my local exhange, you know. they've (my exchange) have changed their setup for the better over recent months and improved overall for the most.
 
^i think i've seen that at my local exhange, you know. they've (my exchange) have changed their setup for the better over recent months and improved overall for the most.

I'd say so. Unfortunately, our NSP has stopped providing tourniquets and Hirudoid cream (for vein care) due to lack of funding. I mean sure, Hirudoid cream isn't cheap and is available at the pharmacy but tournies?! I'm sure the special rubber that they're made from cost the government an absolute mint. 8(

Ash. <3
 
it's the same with my nsp ten bucks for a torni and it's one a the proper nurse like ones so you can't just undo it without leaving the needle hanging. ..
 
Oh, that info is great... And reminds me of an "ER Doctor" who threatened to write drug seeker all over my file when I had kidney stones. Like many others.- I have higher analgesic requirements.
 
In Oz our local "user groups" (set up for anyone interested in harm reduction in relation to illicit drug use) have gone as far as running free info seminars where they not only cover resuscitation (CPR, airway etc) but ALSO give out ready to use syringes of Naloxone (what the medics give you to bring you back if you've od'd on opiates).
This has reduced our overdose rate in Australia dramatically... maybe the US might consider a similar concept?
Just an idea ;)
MG
 
Harm reduction and injection supplies mail order in Oz
www.safershooting.com.au

This web address is not valid, perhaps old as the post I saw it in was 2012.
is anyone aware of a similar place in Victoria or Melbourne as I'm having to buy mine due to the size I use which is:

31G X 8mm thin 1 ml syringe. They're almost 1/2 the length of the "usual" free kind, but these are too long and too severe for me, and I would think most women. I don't understand how these programs speculate, that one size fits all.
All the needle exchanges in my surrounding suburbs, heave never heard of the ones I keep asking for, so I keep having to buy them.
 
QuIHN - Queensland Injectors health network
www.quihn.org

Gold Coast
Brisbane
Townsville
Sunshine Coast
Cairns

Needle syringe program , Naloxone training
GP clinic,
Hep c support and treatment program (TIDE),A
OD counselling,
safer injecting courses
 
It comes down to what is funded by the relevant state government

This web address is not valid, perhaps old as the post I saw it in was 2012.
is anyone aware of a similar place in Victoria or Melbourne as I'm having to buy mine due to the size I use which is:

31G X 8mm thin 1 ml syringe. They're almost 1/2 the length of the "usual" free kind, but these are too long and too severe for me, and I would think most women. I don't understand how these programs speculate, that one size fits all.
All the needle exchanges in my surrounding suburbs, heave never heard of the ones I keep asking for, so I keep having to buy them.

I know the ones you mean - got a few from a vet nurse mate once (Braun 0.5ml x 31g x 3/8"). We called them "short stickers" :) Some big NSPs (needle syringe programs aka needle exchanges) can order in needle/syringes like this and sell them onto you at cost - generally about $20 for a box of 100.
 
Melbourne (Coburg)

These guys seem really good. I had to go to a session there for legal reasons and I was impressed by what I saw. I wish there was one south of Melb.

https://www.regen.org.au/

19846
 
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