
Australian kids with cancer forced overseas for treatment as proton therapy centre sits empty in Adelaide
It was meant to revolutionise cancer treatment for Australian children.
Instead, Adelaide 's state-of-the-art Australian Bragg Centre for Proton Therapy now sits pretty much empty, and is likely to remain so for many years to come.
WATCH THE VIDEO ABOVE: Lack of cancer treatment forces Australian families to seek care abroad.
Know the news with the 7NEWS app: Download today
It means hundreds of Australian families already navigating the hardest point in their lives after being told their kid has cancer will have to deal with endless paperwork for government grants or raise thousands of dollars themselves before packing up their lives and travelling to the United States for treatment.
Opposition health spokesperson Anne Ruston declared it an 'absolute national shame and an abject failure'.
She said many children and babies 'likely will die as a result of not being able to get access to the technology that was promised to them'.
The project was promised eight years ago by the federal Liberal and state government.
But last year the South Australian Labor government tore up the contract with the US company supplying the proton beam machine over funding issues.
An auditor general report into the decision has since found significant 'gaps' in the way the state government managed the project.
'Including the need for... effective oversight, project management and risk management arrangements, reflecting a project that is high risk, has a significant cost and has national consequences,' the report said.
South Australian Premier Peter Malinauskas told 7NEWS: 'We can't fix the errors of the past, we just have to focus on a way we can get through this rather complex policy challenge.'
But with more than $100 million of public money already spent and no clear timeline for completion, the cost to taxpayers, and to Australian families, is mounting.
Federal Health Minister Mark Butler said 'we are trying to work out really how much of that money is going to be able to be recouped', if any.
'But it seems quite clear to me on the best advice I have from the department that there is going to be a significant taxpayer loss here,' he said.
He warned that it could still be years before Australia has a functioning proton therapy unit, and pointed the finger at earlier decisions made under the former Marshall Liberal government in South Australia and the Turnbull Liberal government federally for choosing a controversial company unable to deliver the machine.
Ruston rejected the attempt to shift blame, saying 'it is a sad indictment that you would have a health minister who is about to enter his second term who is still blaming previous governments for the failures that are occurring on his watch'.
While politicians argue, and bureaucrats continue to release reports, almost 1000 Australian families are trying to raise enough money to receive lifesaving treatment in America.
Five-year-old Lenna Housseini was recently knocked back by the federal government's Medical Overseas Treatment Program, which helps Australians with life-threatening medical conditions access treatment overseas when it is not available here.
Her parents would need to raise $500,000 privately for her to go.
Without the time to do so, she will undergo treatment for Malignant Rhabdoid Tumour in Australia.
While the X-ray radiation here could save her life, there is only a 40 per cent chance she will survive and if she does pull through, she may struggle to speak.
'It's too late to complain, it's too late to do anything, it's too late to even have the regret, because we don't have time to have regret, we have to stay positive,' her father Amin Housseini said earlier this week.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

The Age
25 minutes ago
- The Age
Why my husband's howl over back pain could happen 4 million times around Australia
I am no Carrie. I caught a taxi home. Dylan was, thankfully, wearing pants. An estimated 4 million Australians have back problems, and rising numbers are calling triple zero for ambulances to take them to emergency departments (EDs). Back pain was the fifth-most common presentation to Australian EDs in 2023-24 (almost 155,000). But most people with sudden-onset back pain don't need emergency care, which could lead to unnecessary and potentially harmful complications. 'There's something deeply primal about our response to sudden-onset back pain,' Sydney GP and addiction specialist Dr Hester Wilson said. 'It's very common, but it can be incredibly frightening,' she said. 'All those large muscles protecting the spinal cord suddenly seize up, and the emotional message this sends is 'danger!' 'The problem is, they don't know where to go for help.' 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. 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. NSW Health recommended people with back pain seek urgent care if they cannot pass urine or lose bowel control, have progressive loss of feeling or movement, or their symptoms get worse, despite following back pain management advice. How to self-manage lower back pain Stay active: do as much usual activity as possible – a little more each day. Avoid bed rest. Too much rest can slow recovery. Protecting your back too much by tensing or avoiding movement can make things worse. Use simple pain relief: Heat wraps or heat packs, distraction techniques and relaxed breathing. Medication: Your doctor may recommend short-term over-the-counter or prescription medications to help you stay active while you recover. Source: NSW Agency for Clinical Innovation's advice for managing lower back pain Vella said fever or unexplained weight loss with back pain could also be a medical emergency. 'Ambulance services are there to be used when needed,' he said. '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.

Sydney Morning Herald
25 minutes ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
Why my husband's howl over back pain could happen 4 million times around Australia
I am no Carrie. I caught a taxi home. Dylan was, thankfully, wearing pants. An estimated 4 million Australians have back problems, and rising numbers are calling triple zero for ambulances to take them to emergency departments (EDs). Back pain was the fifth-most common presentation to Australian EDs in 2023-24 (almost 155,000). But most people with sudden-onset back pain don't need emergency care, which could lead to unnecessary and potentially harmful complications. 'There's something deeply primal about our response to sudden-onset back pain,' Sydney GP and addiction specialist Dr Hester Wilson said. 'It's very common, but it can be incredibly frightening,' she said. 'All those large muscles protecting the spinal cord suddenly seize up, and the emotional message this sends is 'danger!' 'The problem is, they don't know where to go for help.' 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. 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. NSW Health recommended people with back pain seek urgent care if they cannot pass urine or lose bowel control, have progressive loss of feeling or movement, or their symptoms get worse, despite following back pain management advice. How to self-manage lower back pain Stay active: do as much usual activity as possible – a little more each day. Avoid bed rest. Too much rest can slow recovery. Protecting your back too much by tensing or avoiding movement can make things worse. Use simple pain relief: Heat wraps or heat packs, distraction techniques and relaxed breathing. Medication: Your doctor may recommend short-term over-the-counter or prescription medications to help you stay active while you recover. Source: NSW Agency for Clinical Innovation's advice for managing lower back pain Vella said fever or unexplained weight loss with back pain could also be a medical emergency. 'Ambulance services are there to be used when needed,' he said. '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.


West Australian
an hour ago
- West Australian
Nat Locke: applying for a Turkish visa has led to frustration, anguished wailing and a loss of faith in tech
I have spent most of this week jumping to the obvious conclusion that the Turkish government hates me, which is a fairly bold statement, I know. Let me explain. I'm heading off on holidays in just a couple of weeks' time and my first stop is Turkey. Or Turkiye if we're going to be absolutely correct about it. And seeing as I'm trying to get them to like me, Turkiye it is. So, as an Australian visiting Turkiye, I'm eligible to apply for an e-visa prior to my arrival. It's a relatively simple process, that in a perfect world, goes like this: Step 1: Fill out an online form with your passport and contact details. Step 2: Wait for an email. Step 3: Activate the link in the email within 60 minutes. Step 4: Pay. Step 5: Admire your new Turkish e-visa. What could possibly go wrong, I hear you ask. Well. I completed Step 1 on a Thursday evening a couple of weeks ago and checked my email. No email that night. No email all Friday. Then an email from the Republic of Turkiye turned up at 5:28am on Saturday. Unfortunately I didn't wake up until 7:15am, so the 60 minutes had elapsed and I had missed my window. So I went back to Step 1 again on Saturday at about midday. No email arrived on Saturday. No email arrived on Sunday. I started to take it personally. After all, I have been nothing but supportive of Turkiye. I'm a big fan of Turkish Delight, for starters, and sometimes I get mocked for my choices. But I digress. The much-awaited email turned up at 5:22am on Monday. Luckily, I was already at work, so I asked for silence and clicked on the link. And what appeared was a message indicating that my 60 minutes had already elapsed and I would have to go back to Step 1 again. At this point, I declared that the system was basically impenetrable. If the email didn't arrive in time, how was I supposed to activate the link? I was literally at a stalemate, but I love a challenge. So I utilised the strategy that has helped just about everyone to subscribe for something twice. Yes, I used my work email address. Back to Step 1 I went, laboriously filling in my passport details yet again. On the upside, I now know when my passport expires. It is seared into my brain. And guys, THIS TIME IT WORKED. The email appeared in my inbox immediately. I eagerly clicked on it, ready to activate the link and finally make my way to Step 3. And the email disappeared. It just ceased to be. It wasn't in my junk file or my deleted items folders. There wasn't even a tiny puff of smoke. So, I did what any tech-savvy human being would do. I asked the Turkish government to resend the email. And it appeared immediately. And then as soon as I clicked to open it again, it disappeared forever. At this point you may have heard some anguished wailing emanating from the greater Fremantle area. Yeah, that was me. The next day, I enlisted the assistance of one of our technical dudes at work, hoping he might be able to identify why these official government emails kept disappearing in front of my eyes. Being an expert in such things, he peered at my monitor for a while, then shrugged. Eventually, he asked someone in our Melbourne office to do something about it, presuming it's some sort of spam filter that prevents employees from applying for e-visas on company time. Or something like that. If I'm trying to find a positive in this scenario, it's that I've determined I'm not actually an enemy of the Turkish state. I'm just an enemy of technology in general. What a relief. As it stands, though, I still don't have a visa for Turkiye. If my research has served me well, it is possible to get a visa on arrival, but that would involve joining a queue at Istanbul airport after a 21-hour journey, which is what I would quaintly refer to as the 'worst case scenario'. In addition, I have lost my faith in technology, which might be problematic in the future.