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[Correspondence] Rohingya in Bangladesh: an unfolding public health emergency

I am writing from Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh, where a large number of Rohingya have taken refuge and where our organisation, Médecins Sans Frontières, has been providing emergency medical assistance. I am working as the medical emergency manager in Kutupolong, a makeshift settlement in the Cox’s Bazar district, which borders Myanmar. Of the estimated 1·2 million people in the peninsula that connects with Myanmar, only 250 000 of them are local Bangladeshi. The rest are forcibly displaced Myanmar nationals, and refugees from prior to 1992, who have been fleeing here since the 1990s.

Productivity Commission recommends big changes to health system

Australians are living longer than people in most other developed countries, but they are also spending longer periods in ill health.

That is one finding of the Productivity Commission’s five-year review, released in October and titled Shifting the Dial.

It also found that most Australians have great confidence in the health care they receive.

The report has recommended, however, a dramatic adjustment to the nation’s health system, with reforms that could save more $140 billion over 20 years.

Poor communication between healthcare professionals – GPs and public hospitals in particular – has contributed to problematic issues faced by patients, the report finds.

And it suggests supervised vending machines could replace community pharmacy roles in dispensing medicines in some locations.

“Australians are living longer, with less disability than ever before. Australia outranks most other highly developed economies in health outcomes,” the report states.

“It has the third greatest life expectancy at birth among OECD countries in 2015 at 82.8 years and a high absolute number of years spent in good health (though a lower than expected number given our life expectancy)…

“Indeed, Australia has one of the highest obesity rates in the world, and it appears to be still rising. And while Australians have high life expectancy, they also have the highest number of years spent in ill-health compared with other OECD countries.”

According to the review, the overwhelming share of Australians had confidence they would receive quality and safe medical care, effective medication and the best medical technology if they were seriously ill.

Australia is faring comparatively well by international benchmarks in certain areas of preventative health — most notably in reducing rates of smoking and transport accident deaths.

“On face value, the cost effectiveness of Australia’s health system also appears relatively high compared with other OECD countries, with Australia spending less on health than many countries for comparable or better outcomes in life expectancy,” it states.

Yet Productivity Commission chairman Peter Harris described a “non-existent communication” between different parts of the health system that has led to many problems.

He has recommended to the Federal Government that it undertake a significant overhaul of how the sector functions.

“A simple indicator of service integration is the proportion of a hospital’s patients whose GPs are provided with a discharge summary within 24 hours of discharge,” his report states.

“Currently, Australia’s performance appears poor. Less than 20 per cent of Australian GPs were always told when a patient was seen in an emergency department compared with 68 per cent in the Netherlands, 56 per cent in New Zealand and 49 per cent in the United Kingdom.

“Clinicians, patients and researchers operate under a veil of ignorance posed by inadequate information flows and haphazard data collection. Private health insurance sits uneasily with a system of public insurance, with their respective roles weakly defined.

“The imperative is therefore better coordination of the system, giving a greater weight to the role of public health, and acceptance of people themselves as partners in their own health management.”

GPs are the clinicians that Australians most frequently see and are highly trusted, the report states.

It says all Australian governments should re-configure the healthcare system around the principles of patient-centred care, and implement changes within a five-year timeframe.

Australian governments are urged to cooperate to remove the current “messy, partial and duplicated presentation of information and data” and provide easy access to healthcare data for providers, researchers and consumers.

And the review recommends the Federal Government end community pharmacy as the vehicle for dispensing medicines and move towards a model that anticipates automatic dispensing in a majority of locations.

This would be supervised by a suitably qualified person. In clinical settings, pharmacists should play a new remunerated collaborative role with other primary health professionals where there is evidence of the cost-effectiveness of this approach.

An alcohol tax system that removes the current concessional treatment of high-alcohol, low-value products, primarily cheap cask and fortified wines, should also be embraced.

The uptake of technologies that could lower costs and increase convenience and quality has often been slow, the review found.

“Telehealth is still in its infancy, and restrictions in payment models frustrate its diffusion,” it states.

“More generally, the adoption of eHealth has had a protracted and troubled history in Australia that is only now beginning to be resolved. The old chestnuts — the anti-competitive regulation of the professions and the incongruities presented by retail pharmacy regulations have proved resistant to repeated calls for reform.”

The imperative for policy action is justified on many counts, according to the review. It says such action will produce better health outcomes and wellbeing, provide more voice to and choice for patients, and result in greater efficiency.

“Wasteful expenditure means that resources are being used in the wrong places to no or little effect on health outcomes,” the report says.

In launching the Productivity Commission’s findings, Federal Treasurer Scott Morrison said the review would make governments and the health sector consider the effectiveness of the health system.

“Improving the health of Australians is not just about enhancing our quality of life; it’s an economic growth strategy,” Mr Morrison said.

“Healthy and happy people are naturally more productive people.”

The full report can be found at: https://www.pc.gov.au/inquiries/completed/productivity-review/report

CHRIS JOHNSON

[Review] Transport and public health in China: the road to a healthy future

Transportation-related risk factors are a major source of morbidity and mortality in China, where the expansion of road networks and surges in personal vehicle ownership are having profound effects on public health. Road traffic injuries and fatalities have increased alongside increased use of motorised transport in China, and accident injury risk is aggravated by inadequate emergency response systems and trauma care. National air quality standards and emission control technologies are having a positive effect on air quality, but persistent air pollution is increasingly attributable to a growing and outdated vehicle fleet and to famously congested roads.

[Case Report] Jaundice, abdominal pain, and fever in a young woman

A 23-year-old woman presented to the emergency department in December, 2016, with a 10-day history of vomiting, myalgia, and upper abdominal pain. 3 days before presentation she had seen her general practitioner who prescribed empirical clarithromycin, with no improvement in her symptoms, and 2 days later she developed jaundice and pruritus, prompting her attendance at our hospital. She had a history of ulcerative colitis with a pan-proctocolectomy and end ileostomy. She took no regular medication, rarely drank alcohol, and had no history of travel abroad or recent blood transfusions.

Nation-first pill testing trial at Canberra music festival

Australia’s first pill testing trial will be held at a music festival in Canberra later this year, prompting applause from drug reform advocates but concern from the Federal Government.

Revellers at the Spilt Milk festival in November will be able to have their illicit substances tested for purity and authenticity, and will have the option of safely disposing of the pills if they turn out to be not what they thought they had purchased.

ACT Health Minister Meegan Fitzharris said the testing would be provided free by the Safety Testing and Advisory Service at Festivals and Events (STA-SAFE), which is led by Harm Reduction Australia, Australian Drug Observatory, Noffs Foundation, DanceWize and Students for Sensible Drug Policy.

A similar proposal for another festival in May was denied.

Ms Fitzharris said the decision had been made after careful assessment of the STA-SAFE proposal, and of pill testing schemes in New Zealand and Canada.

“We need to find the right balance between letting young people know it’s illegal to take drugs, they can be very harmful, but also being realistic because we’ve seen deaths at festivals, five in 2015 alone, so if that helps to keep people safe, it’s worth doing,” Ms Fitzharris said.

“Pill testing means young people who are considering taking drugs can be informed about what’s really in their pills, and how potent they are, and it creates an opportunity to remind them of the risks before they make the final decision to take a drug.”

While the AMA has always supported a range of drug harm minimisation measures, AMA President Dr Michael Gannon raised concerns that the trial might send the wrong message.

“We do need to do better but we also need real evidence that something works,” Dr Gannon told The Project.

“And the last thing we would want to do is give people a false sense of security about taking illegal drugs cooked up in someone’s bath tub.”

The AMA is concerned that pill testing does not entirely remove the risks associated with taking illicit drugs, as people react to drugs differently, and may also be influenced by the amount of drug consumed, gender, age, weight and other substances consumed such as alcohol.

The announcement coincided with the launch of a new national TV and online advertising campaign cracking down on ice and party drugs, aimed at school leavers who are preparing to celebrate the end of their school education.

Federal Health Minister Greg Hunt said while the pill testing trial was a matter for the ACT Government, the Federal Government did not support it “as a matter of principle”.

“Saying that any drug is okay is not okay,” Mr Hunt told Weekend Sunrise.

“People can have a reaction to any drug. There are no safe illicit drugs, and I think that’s a very important message.”

Festival goers will be able to attend a medical tent and provide a sample of a drug to be tested using laboratory grade equipment for free.

After receiving the results, the person will have the option of keeping the pill or discarding it in an amnesty bin containing bleach.

Regardless of the test outcome, trained drug counsellors will warn festival goers about the health risks of illegal drugs.

Dr David Caldicott, an emergency medicine specialist and advocate for Harm Reduction Australia, said the move would stop people taking drugs and prevent deaths.

Research from overseas programs showed up to 60 per cent of people who had their pills tested went on to throw them away, he said.

ACT Chief Police Officer Justine Saunders said ACT Policing supported the program and had been actively working with ACT Government and stakeholders.

“ACT Policing will be patrolling the festival to ensure patrons enjoy the event in a safe environment,” she said.

“Police will not enter the health facility that contains the pill testing station unless requested to do so by festival organisers, security staff or emergency services or in response to an emergency situation.”

MARIA HAWTHORNE

 

United Hatzalah and the success of the ambucycle

On a hot August night in Jerusalem, a motorcycle with flashing lights sped past our outdoor dining table. It looked like an emergency pizza delivery. The motorcycle was actually a United Hatzalah motorcycle ambulance, or “ambucycle” as they are known. 

The story of this service and how is originated is an example of innovative emergency health care that some other cities around the world are now adopting.

United Hatzalah is a not-for-profit entity that provides emergency medical care to all people regardless of ethnicity or religion. It was founded by Eli Beer, a former Jerusalem ambulance officer.

As a teenager, Eli Beer witnessed a terrorist attack on a domestic bus and saw traditional ambulances stuck in urban traffic, arriving too late to save some victims. Anyone who has been to a major city, especially in the Middle-East, Asia and the sub-continent which were not designed for the influx of millions of motor vehicles, buses and trucks, would be familiar with the type of traffic chaos that can leave ambulances stuck in ‘jams’.    

At a young age, Eli Beer began what is now United Hatzalah, a community-based medical responder model. He didn’t invent this concept, but he was the first person to turn it into a free national model. United Hatzalah services includes a fleet of specially equipped “ambucycles” that are fitted with almost everything a traditional ambulance carries except for a backboard, stretcher, chair, and bed. Ambucycles have an average response time of three minutes. The 3000 plus medics operating these motorcycles are now Israel’s primary first responders for most medical emergencies.  The medics are all volunteers and comprise Jews, non-Jews, Muslims and Christians.

The ambucycles can easily maneuver through Jerusalem’s maze of streets and crowded pedestrian walkways, and even use non-traditional paths to reach emergencies.  They use an advanced GPS tracking technology – Moskowitz Lifecompass – that is now the basis for an app that alerts security forces when a person is in distress or kidnapped.

The advanced GPS tracking is vital because Jerusalem has a new light rail system that prevents motor vehicles from easily accessing sections of the city. Traditional ambulances are forced to negotiate narrow streets, illegally parked vehicles and cannot get into small thoroughfares and the like.   

The free services doesn’t just use ambucycles, they now have ambutractors, first responder push bicycles, an ambuboat and even jet skis that enable medics to reach patients, regardless of the environment, location or terrain.

From what I’ve read, the United Hatzalah community-based responder model is now being used in 10 countries, and there are plans to set up an operation in India soon. They say that their services, including their applications and technologies, can be downloaded by anyone for free. They also provide free transport to hospitals.

Since their inception, United Hatzalah claim to have treated over two million patients “and never once did any of them receive a bill for services” said their founder.

SIMON TATZ
AMA DIRECTOR PUBLIC HEALTH

 

The world is running out of antibiotics

The World Health Organization has confirmed in a new report that there is a serious lack of new antibiotics under development to combat the growing threat of antimicrobial resistance.

The report, Antibacterial agents in clinical development – an analysis of the antibacterial clinical development pipeline, including tuberculosis, reveals there is a serious lack of treatment options for multidrug- and extensively drug-resistant M. tuberculosis and gram-negative pathogens, including Acinetobacter and Enterobacteriaceae (such as Klebsiella and E.coli). 

This is alarming because these pathogens can cause severe and often deadly infections that pose a particular threat in hospitals and nursing homes.

Most of the drugs currently being developed are modifications of existing classes of antibiotics and are only short-term solutions. The report found very few potential treatment options for those antibiotic-resistant infections. This includes drug-resistant tuberculosis which kills around 250,000 people each year.

Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director-General of WHO, believes antimicrobial resistance is a global health emergency.

“There is an urgent need for more investment in research and development for antibiotic-resistant infections including TB, otherwise we will be forced back to a time when people feared common infections and risked their lives from minor surgery,” Dr Tedros cautioned.

WHO has also identified 12 classes of priority pathogens which can cause common infections such as pneumonia or urinary tract infections but are increasingly resistant to existing antibiotics and urgently in need of new treatments.

The report identifies 51 new antibiotics and biologicals in clinical development to treat priority antibiotic-resistant pathogens, as well as tuberculosis and the sometimes deadly diarrhoeal infection Clostridium difficile.

Among all these candidate medicines, however, only eight are classed by WHO as innovative treatments. There are also very few new oral antibiotics being developed, despite these being essential formulations for treating infections outside hospitals or in resource-limited settings.

“Pharmaceutical companies and researchers must urgently focus on new antibiotics against certain types of extremely serious infections that can kill patients in a matter of days because we have no line of defence,” explained Dr Suzanne Hill, Director of the Department of Essential Medicines at WHO.

To counter this threat, WHO and the Drugs for Neglected Diseases Initiative (DNDi) have set up the Global Antibiotic Research and Development Partnership (known as GARDP), with Germany, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, South Africa, Switzerland and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and the Wellcome Trust recently pledging more than €56 million.

“Research for tuberculosis is seriously underfunded, with only two new antibiotics for treatment of drug-resistant tuberculosis having reached the market in over 70 years,” Dr Mario Raviglione, Director of the WHO Global Tuberculosis Programme said.

WHO believes that new treatments alone will not be sufficient to combat the threat of antimicrobial resistance, and is developing guidance for the responsible use of antibiotics in the human, animal and agricultural sectors.

The AMA believes the over-prescribing of antibiotics is a threat to the wellbeing of Australians as we remain one of the highest consumers of antibiotics in the industrialised world. The AMA also encourages antibiotics to be responsibly prescribed.

MEREDITH HORNE

[Correspondence] Tranexamic acid for post-partum haemorrhage in the WOMAN trial

As clinicians and researchers of post-partum haemorrhage, we appreciate the clinical trial of tranexamic acid1 and applaud the researchers and results. We want to emphasise the importance of the addition of tranexamic acid to other technologies and strategies to form a complete comprehensive package for post-partum haemorrhage (or emergency post-partum haemorrhage bundle),2 which begins at the community level and proceeds, with attention to context, through primary health care to the referral-hospital level.