
'Backbone of health': new plan for rural maternity care
An outback woman was fully prepared for a four-hour trip to the closest hospital to give birth.
Living in Lightning Ridge, in far western NSW, the expectant mum was pragmatic about the long journey ahead.
But she had not anticipated the dearth of basic care once she and her baby returned home.
The woman, an emergency worker, told a NSW rural health inquiry of her experience waiting for weeks to see a GP or a nurse to help her with post-birth complications and an unsettled baby.
"As a first-time mum, being pregnant in Lightning Ridge was downright scary and being a mum to a newborn ... is harder than it should be," she wrote to the 2022 inquiry.
Stories like these shared at federal and state inquiries in recent years, along with the continued closure of rural birthing services across Australia, has prompted a new plan for maternity care in the bush.
Peak health bodies, including the Rural Doctors Association and the National Rural Health Alliance, have backed the first rural maternity framework to be released since 2008.
The framework urges government investment in maternity services co-designed with locals, including First Nations communities, along with a focus on continuity of care from known clinicians before, during and after birth.
There should also be clear access to miscarriage and abortion care and a guarantee of telehealth or outreach services in remote areas.
Scholarships for rural students could be established to get more locals into maternity health roles, in a "grow your own" program, the framework said.
There was a 41 per cent reduction in maternity services across Australia in the decade to 2011, mostly in small towns, and larger regional birthing units have been frequently placed on bypass due to staff shortages.
New strategies were needed to ensure country families receive equitable care, National Rural Health Commissioner Jenny May said.
"A rural maternity service is the backbone of healthcare service delivery - keeping families close, communities strong, and ensuring safe beginnings for the next generation, while supporting the sustainability of local industry through a stable and thriving population," Professor May said.
Major regional maternity services have been placed on bypass intermittently across several states, including in Gladstone, Queensland, and Camperdown, Victoria.
Those services resumed in 2023 and 2024.
In NSW, Tamworth hospital is under immense pressure, while Bathurst, Lithgow and Kempsey maternity units are on the brink of closing down, a 2024 rural health inquiry found.
Those kind of scenarios increased the risk faced by rural women and their babies, Rural Doctors Association president RT Lewandowski said.
"Women and families often have to travel significant distances or relocate to a town or city with birthing facilities which is expensive, stressful and not acceptable for rural families living in Australia in 2025," Dr Lewandowski said.

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West Australian
13 hours ago
- West Australian
'Backbone of health': new plan for rural maternity care
An outback woman was fully prepared for a four-hour trip to the closest hospital to give birth. Living in Lightning Ridge, in far western NSW, the expectant mum was pragmatic about the long journey ahead. But she had not anticipated the dearth of basic care once she and her baby returned home. The woman, an emergency worker, told a NSW rural health inquiry of her experience waiting for weeks to see a GP or a nurse to help her with post-birth complications and an unsettled baby. "As a first-time mum, being pregnant in Lightning Ridge was downright scary and being a mum to a newborn ... is harder than it should be," she wrote to the 2022 inquiry. Stories like these shared at federal and state inquiries in recent years, along with the continued closure of rural birthing services across Australia, has prompted a new plan for maternity care in the bush. Peak health bodies, including the Rural Doctors Association and the National Rural Health Alliance, have backed the first rural maternity framework to be released since 2008. The framework urges government investment in maternity services co-designed with locals, including First Nations communities, along with a focus on continuity of care from known clinicians before, during and after birth. There should also be clear access to miscarriage and abortion care and a guarantee of telehealth or outreach services in remote areas. Scholarships for rural students could be established to get more locals into maternity health roles, in a "grow your own" program, the framework said. There was a 41 per cent reduction in maternity services across Australia in the decade to 2011, mostly in small towns, and larger regional birthing units have been frequently placed on bypass due to staff shortages. New strategies were needed to ensure country families receive equitable care, National Rural Health Commissioner Jenny May said. "A rural maternity service is the backbone of healthcare service delivery - keeping families close, communities strong, and ensuring safe beginnings for the next generation, while supporting the sustainability of local industry through a stable and thriving population," Professor May said. Major regional maternity services have been placed on bypass intermittently across several states, including in Gladstone, Queensland, and Camperdown, Victoria. Those services resumed in 2023 and 2024. In NSW, Tamworth hospital is under immense pressure, while Bathurst, Lithgow and Kempsey maternity units are on the brink of closing down, a 2024 rural health inquiry found. Those kind of scenarios increased the risk faced by rural women and their babies, Rural Doctors Association president RT Lewandowski said. "Women and families often have to travel significant distances or relocate to a town or city with birthing facilities which is expensive, stressful and not acceptable for rural families living in Australia in 2025," Dr Lewandowski said.


Perth Now
13 hours ago
- Perth Now
'Backbone of health': new plan for rural maternity care
An outback woman was fully prepared for a four-hour trip to the closest hospital to give birth. Living in Lightning Ridge, in far western NSW, the expectant mum was pragmatic about the long journey ahead. But she had not anticipated the dearth of basic care once she and her baby returned home. The woman, an emergency worker, told a NSW rural health inquiry of her experience waiting for weeks to see a GP or a nurse to help her with post-birth complications and an unsettled baby. "As a first-time mum, being pregnant in Lightning Ridge was downright scary and being a mum to a newborn ... is harder than it should be," she wrote to the 2022 inquiry. Stories like these shared at federal and state inquiries in recent years, along with the continued closure of rural birthing services across Australia, has prompted a new plan for maternity care in the bush. Peak health bodies, including the Rural Doctors Association and the National Rural Health Alliance, have backed the first rural maternity framework to be released since 2008. The framework urges government investment in maternity services co-designed with locals, including First Nations communities, along with a focus on continuity of care from known clinicians before, during and after birth. There should also be clear access to miscarriage and abortion care and a guarantee of telehealth or outreach services in remote areas. Scholarships for rural students could be established to get more locals into maternity health roles, in a "grow your own" program, the framework said. There was a 41 per cent reduction in maternity services across Australia in the decade to 2011, mostly in small towns, and larger regional birthing units have been frequently placed on bypass due to staff shortages. New strategies were needed to ensure country families receive equitable care, National Rural Health Commissioner Jenny May said. "A rural maternity service is the backbone of healthcare service delivery - keeping families close, communities strong, and ensuring safe beginnings for the next generation, while supporting the sustainability of local industry through a stable and thriving population," Professor May said. Major regional maternity services have been placed on bypass intermittently across several states, including in Gladstone, Queensland, and Camperdown, Victoria. Those services resumed in 2023 and 2024. In NSW, Tamworth hospital is under immense pressure, while Bathurst, Lithgow and Kempsey maternity units are on the brink of closing down, a 2024 rural health inquiry found. Those kind of scenarios increased the risk faced by rural women and their babies, Rural Doctors Association president RT Lewandowski said. "Women and families often have to travel significant distances or relocate to a town or city with birthing facilities which is expensive, stressful and not acceptable for rural families living in Australia in 2025," Dr Lewandowski said.

ABC News
5 days ago
- ABC News
Childcare, early education advocates sound alarm as development census results decline
Nearly half of Australian children are not considered on track with their development, according to the latest Australian Early Development Census (AEDC). The teacher questionnaire looks at children in their first year of school, and found just 52.9 per cent were on track in all five development areas surveyed in 2024. The results are an improvement on the first census taken in 2009, but a deterioration from the last survey in 2021. The percentage of children considered to be facing "significant challenges" to their development increased marginally in all areas, between 0.2 and 1.5 per cent. Chief executive of Early Childhood Australia Samantha Page told RN Breakfast the COVID-19 pandemic had played a major role in the latest result. "Play-based learning is really important for developing social competence and emotional maturity." Both those areas are assessed in the AEDC, along with physical health and wellbeing, language and cognitive skills, and communication skills and general knowledge. Ms Page stressed it was possible for developmentally vulnerable children to catch up, but that it took "a lot of resources". She said she supported the federal government's goal of a universal early education system, but the focus must be on disadvantaged children. Children from First Nations, non-English speaking, rural and remote, and low socio-economic backgrounds recorded worse results overall in the AEDC. The Labor government has promised to build more childcare centres in areas of need, and reforms to childcare subsidies, regardless of how much parents work or study, come into effect in January. "I think a country as well off as Australia really should have more than just over half of its children developmentally on track in the first year of school, and we really would like to see a concerted effort in response to this," Ms Page said. In the regional Victorian city of Ballarat, CEO of the Eureka Community Kindergarten Association (ECKA) Jo Geurts said the AEDC results could not be explained by the pandemic. "Early childhood was one of the only services that continued to operate all the way through COVID … in our region," she said. "I think it's more than that." She pointed to long waiting lists for health services, and workforce pay and training as areas in need of more investment. "The development of the brain in children in the years before they're eight years old is dramatic … so we need really high-quality educators," she said. Ms Geurts would like to see a shift in the language around the industry. "Yes, it's about workforce participation, particularly for women, but it's also got to be very much about children in a rich learning environment." Nearly one-quarter of Australian children live in a "childcare desert" — where three or more children compete for a place. That includes parts of the Wimmera, where early childhood advocacy group By Five works to close childcare gaps, and improve health outcomes by linking families with specialists and bringing allied health workers into schools. By Five executive officer Jo Martin said support must be tailored to community needs, and should be more flexible across departments and governments. "It's really important that we don't let … borders get in the way of getting the best outcomes for children," she said. Louise Middleton is a maternal child health nurse working in north-east Victoria, and has seen firsthand the challenges for people living more than 100 kilometres from key services. She told ABC Statewide Drive that developmental delays were exacerbated by long waiting lists. "If we [maternal child health nurses] pick up any issue with the child for their school readiness, we are absolutely unable to get them assessed in a timely manner," she said. "It's taking six to eight months just to get their in-home assessment, and then it's taking another six months for them to get NDIS or any other referrals and assistance." The federal and Victorian education ministers have been contacted for comment.