
Heartbroken mum urges free vaccines for deadly disease
A grieving parent is urging states to act quickly and help stop a fatal yet preventable disease by making vaccines free.
Meningococcal B is the leading strain of the disease in Australia, accounting for five in six cases in 2022.
But families trying to protect key groups - young children and adolescents - need to fork out about $270 for the two-dose vaccine in NSW, Victoria and Western Australia.
Without it, the disease kills about one in 10 and leaves one-in-four survivors with permanent complications.
Research has also found the jab can reduce gonorrhoea cases in teenagers, an antibiotic-resistant infection that can cause infertility.
With the NSW budget on the horizon, Stacey Charter pleaded with state leaders to ensure other families do not experience the heartache she felt after losing her son to the fast-moving disease.
Days before Christmas in 2022, Stacey noticed her son Brayden was feeling unwell and two hours later she found him convulsing and unresponsive.
Despite being rushed to hospital, the 23-year-old was declared brain-dead later that night.
"No parent should have to endure what we have," Ms Charter said.
"Brayden's death could have been prevented.
"That's why I am pleading with the Minns government and (Health Minister) Ryan Park to act before another family is left heartbroken. I simply don't understand why they won't listen."
The meningococcal B jab is free for First Nations children before their first birthday and people with certain medical conditions under the national immunisation program
But all babies and teens can access it for free under state-funded programs in Northern Territory, South Australia and Queensland.
Meningitis Centre Australia said NSW needed to follow suit and make preventative health a priority.
It says a NSW program would cost an estimated $20 million per year.
"We are on the brink of peak season; we must act now before any other family is impacted," chief executive Karen Quick said.
NSW lower-house independent MPs, opposition health spokeswoman Kellie Sloane and the Greens also back the call for free vaccines.
A government spokesman said it would respond based on the evidence available, with figures showing only one in every 200,000 NSW residents contracted the disease each year.
NSW's health minister had asked federal counterpart Mark Butler to consider including the meningococcal B vaccine in the National Immunisation Program, he said.
About 135 Australians contracted all forms of meningococcal disease in 2024, with 46 cases reported this year, the National Communicable Disease Surveillance Dashboard shows.
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The Age
an hour ago
- The Age
Why my husband's howl over back pain could happen 4 million times around Australia
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Some 38 per cent of back pain patients admitted to hospital via three Sydney EDs for further investigation were found to have a serious underlying cause, such as an infection or fracture, an analysis of medical records showed. They needed to be in hospital. But 57 per cent of admitted patients had no serious underlying causes for their back pain. Associate Professor Gustavo Machado at the Institute for Musculoskeletal Health at the University of Sydney said current approaches to managing back pain in emergency settings often escalate interventions without clinical justification, leading to unnecessary hospital admissions, imaging, and opioid use. Loading Almost one in five patients developed a hospital-acquired complication, most commonly a medication-related adverse effect. 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Sydney Morning Herald
an hour ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
Why my husband's howl over back pain could happen 4 million times around Australia
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Dr Simon Vella, a postdoctoral research fellow at the institute, analysed data from one major Sydney ED and found 46 per cent of people with back pain transported by ambulance received opioids, 59 per cent received imaging, and 50 per cent were admitted. 'Emergency staff and paramedics are often pressed for time,' Vella said. 'They need to make fast decisions about people they've just met, which makes it challenging to determine which patients need emergency care and which do not.' An analysis of more than 73,000 NSW Ambulance patients with back pain found 97 per cent of spinal pain was categorised as non-serious, and 81 per cent were transported to EDs. A NSW Health spokesperson said in most cases, back pain can be appropriately assessed and treated by a GP and allied health services, and scans are unnecessary. 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'If a person is living alone, if they're elderly, they're unable to drive or transport themselves to a medical centre or pharmacy, then calling an ambulance is extremely reasonable.' Clare Beech, NSW Ambulance's executive director of clinical capability, safety, and quality, said a call to triple zero does not necessarily lead to an ambulance transfer to hospital. 'We're increasingly equipped to understand the patient's needs and potentially refer them to someone more appropriate,' Beech said, including via the service's Virtual Clinical Care Centre. 'For people with severe back pain [who] we are unable to manage in their home … there is a likelihood that they would end up being transported to an emergency department,' Beech said. Wilson said GPs were trained to exclude serious causes of back pain and reassure their patients. 'It usually takes about six weeks to resolve, and in that time, we can put a strategy in place,' Wilson said. But long wait times for underfunded GP practices and few after-hours services are major barriers to seeking care. Urgent Care Clinics may divert people from EDs, and Healthdirect's virtualADULTS offers 24/7 urgent telehealth consultations with clinicians. Loading Dylan called Healthdirect. A triage nurse said he would probably need an ambulance. Instead, they put him through to an emergency physician at RPA Hospital, who assessed him, prescribed pain relief and recommended he see a GP and physiotherapist. After about six hours on the bathroom floor, I wedged a towel under his torso and dragged him by his left leg to our bedroom. A singularly bonding experience. He's fine now. Don't ask him about it. He'll tell you I yanked his leg the wrong way on purpose. It was an honest mistake.


7NEWS
13 hours ago
- 7NEWS
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But there is 'limited evidence' that they would be effective as children grow up or allow kids the right to participate in the breadth of digital experiences. Even after the coalition helped secure an amendment to ensure Australians wouldn't have to provide any form of government identification to verify their age, the trial found there was a risk of privacy breaches. Some age assurance service providers had over-anticipated the needs of regulators and built tools that led to an 'unnecessary and disproportionate collection and retention of data'. Opposition communications spokeswoman Melissa McIntosh has urged Labor to confirm what technology or verification tools will be used to protect kids online. 'No more young lives can be lost or families destroyed because of the toxicity of social media,' she said in a statement. The Age Assurance Technology Trial's final report is expected to be published later in 2025.