Senate debates
Monday, 17 March 2008
Health Research
3:57 pm
Lyn Allison (Victoria, Australian Democrats) Share this | Link to this | Hansard source
I move:
- That the Senate—
- (a) notes the study published in the Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health (Vol. 31, Issue 6, pp 551-7, December 2007) by Yazahmeidi and Holman, School of Population Health, University of Western Australia, ‘A survey of suppression of public health information by Australian governments’ which found that:
- (i)
- just under one-third of academics had witnessed the suppression of health information by Australian governments in the past 5.5 years,
- (ii)
- more than one-fifth had experienced such events personally,
- (iii)
- no state or territory in which the survey took place was immune,
- (iv)
- governments most commonly hindered research by sanitising, delaying or prohibiting the publication of findings but ‘there was no part of the research process beyond their reach’,
- (v)
- most of the affected researchers believed that their work had been targeted because it drew attention to failings in health service delivery, uncovered bad news about the health of a vulnerable group, or pointed to a harmful exposure in the environment, and
- (vi)
- in most instances the government agency seeking to suppress the health information succeeded and, consequently the public was left uninformed or given a false impression; and
- (b) calls on the Government to take up the recommendations of the study with state and territory governments, including:
- (i)
- adopting policies that match or exceed the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development’s ‘Guidelines for managing conflict of interest in the public service’,
- (ii)
- adopting a charter by government health agencies and research and academic institutions that supports the independent role of health researchers in evaluating the health system,
- (iii)
- establishing parliamentary ombudsmen or ombudswomen in mediating the resolution of complaints by researchers concerning suppression,
- (iv)
- promoting a culture that avoids blame and values constructive criticism,
- (v)
- promoting the role of institutional ethics committees in scrutinising the ethical behaviour of government agencies and researchers who work together, and
- (vi)
- establishing a surveillance system to monitor the occurrence of suppression events and report on their trends.
Question agreed to.
3:58 pm
Kerry O'Brien (Tasmania, Australian Labor Party) Share this | Link to this | Hansard source
by leave—Mr Deputy President, I ask to have recorded in Hansard that the government opposed that motion.