Senate debates

Wednesday, 9 October 2024

Statements by Senators

Youth Voice in Parliament Week

12:48 pm

Photo of Anne RustonAnne Ruston (SA, Liberal Party, Shadow Minister for Health and Aged Care) Share this | | Hansard source

This week marks Youth Voice in Parliament Week. This is a wonderful initiative aimed at providing the next generation with the opportunity to feel heard in their nation's parliament on the issues that they feel passionately about. So far, it's led to 216 young Australians having their voices amplified through this parliament. More than half of the participants said that it was their first engagement with Australian politics or a politician. So I would like to take this opportunity to thank Raise Our Voice Australia for the work that they have done to help young people, particularly young women, to engage with politics and feel confident in doing so. This not only strengthens our democracy but also, hopefully, encourages the next generation of Australians to put up their hand and seek to represent their community in the parliament. I also, at this time, give a shout-out to the Parliamentary Education Office, who do an amazing job of taking the parliament into our schools and also bringing our schools into the parliament.

This year's speech topic from Raise Our Voice Australia was: 'What do you want your community to look like in the next 10 years, and what can the next parliament do to achieve it?' In answer to this, the following speech was written by Grace, a young woman from my home state of South Australia:

My name is Grace, and I am a 17-year-old.

The scarcity of dignified employment and the shortage of specialist services in our fragmented healthcare system have had a profound impact on my family, myself, and many Australians.

I've had to rely on temporary steroid treatments while waiting nine months to see a specialist.

Our healthcare system frequently opts for short-term solutions without tackling the root causes of long waiting lists.

This unsustainable approach affects the welfare of all Australians and must be addressed to build the ideal community I envision for the next decade.

In South Australia, we face a severe shortage of nurses, with some managing up to six patients simultaneously.

This excessive workload endangers patient safety and prevents nurses from delivering the quality care every Australian deserves.

This situation leaves me, a 17-year-old Australian, feeling hopeless, unsupported, and unheard—a sentiment that extends beyond my personal experience to my entire community.

Honourable members of Parliament, I urge you to take decisive action on these critical issues in the coming years.

We need increased funding to boost staffing and resources, measures to shorten waiting times for specialist care, enhanced training for healthcare professionals, and expanded palliative care services.

Let us work together to create a healthcare system that delivers timely, high-quality care for both patients and healthcare workers.

The well-being of our families, communities, and future generations depends on it.

Thank you.

I firstly congratulate Grace on her really thoughtful and thought-provoking words, and thank her for the opportunity to read her speech out in the parliament today. It was absolutely worthy of being committed to the parliamentary record of all time. I also thank her for her passion on the need to improve our healthcare system in Australia for the benefit of patients, healthcare workers and the whole Australian community.

Grace has shared with me that her interest in politics began with reading the newspaper alongside her nonno. It's a privilege to be part of her continued engagement with politics through the Raise Our Voice campaign. I have no doubt she will have a bright future ahead of her. She has raised the issue of our healthcare system that too often focuses on the short term instead of looking at long-term solutions to address the challenges that we currently are facing—challenges like severe workforce shortages, including of doctors and nurses; difficulties in accessing healthcare advice; and the increasing pressure on our already overrun hospitals. There needs to be real action to ensure that all Australian patients have access to the care they need when they need it and where they need it. I'm a strong believer that in order to ensure Australians can access timely and affordable healthcare we must focus on primary care and identify ways in which we can reduce avoidable interactions with our hospitals and our healthcare system. In pursuit of long-term solutions, I believe that prevention and early intervention is key.

I'd like to assure Grace that I am focused on how we can shift our system away from one that only responds to ill health to one that is focused on achieving good health among our wider community. Creating a healthy Australia has far-reaching benefits for our health system and for Australia's economy and social outcomes more generally. Importantly, it would reduce the pressure on the system's resources and ensure Australians have timely access to the essential healthcare they need when they need it. I also agree with Grace that the current workforce crisis is one of the key issues underlying the challenges facing our healthcare system right now. Workforce shortages are impacting on almost every area of the system, and it's something that the government must take action on.

That is why, as an example, the Leader of the Opposition, Peter Dutton, announced plan to invest $400 million to incentivise junior doctors to train as GPs in the community, providing incentive payments, assistance with leave entitlements and prevocational training. This will ensure junior doctors who pursue training as GPs in the community are not financially worse off compared to doctors who remain in the hospital environment. Junior doctors who enter general practice earn about three-quarters of the salary that counterparts do in hospitals, and this pay cap, along with the loss of paid leave, is often cited as one of the biggest disincentives when young people choose a career not in general practice.

According to the RACGP, Australia's GP shortfall is expected to approach 11,000 doctors by 2031 as fewer medical graduates choose general practice as a speciality. We want to work with the RACGP and doctors across Australia to develop plans to ensure Australia has a strong pipeline of homegrown doctors to ensure Australians have affordable and timely access to essential health care. But I also acknowledge that the problem is widespread, including nurses and care workers, and that is why we will continue to call for a comprehensive strategy for the entire care sector. Australia needs a comprehensive, concerted and multifaceted approach to this problem. Otherwise, we will just keep on robbing Peter to pay Paul as siloed incentives and programs across the country move workforce from one location to another. We know this is impacting Australians in rural and regional Australia more than anywhere else. I will continue to call on government to take real action to protect all Australians' access to essential health care for the benefit of our entire nation.

Finally, I want to thank Grace for her considered contribution to an important issue for so many Australians. I hope that one day you will have the honour and privilege that I currently have: being a member of this parliament and providing yourself the opportunity to put forward your very considered approach on policy decisions to make sure that your voice and the voices of young Australians are the future of this country.

12:56 pm

Photo of Malcolm RobertsMalcolm Roberts (Queensland, Pauline Hanson's One Nation Party) Share this | | Hansard source

Three years ago I promised to hound those who perpetrated the greatest crime in Australian history, and I will continue to do so. Here's the latest evidence of COVID-19 being the crime of the century, taken from new, peer-reviewed, published papers referenced to the lead author. In the Polish Annals of Medicine publication, FIRN conducts a limited literature review of the progression and reporting of COVID-19 vaccine severe adverse events, or SAE, in scientific journals, finding: 'The literature has gone from claiming there are absolutely no SAEs from mRNA based vaccines in 2021 to an acknowledgement of a significant number of various SAEs by 2024. These adverse events include neurological complications, myocarditis, pericarditis and thrombosis.' FIRN said, 'This warns that science should be completely objective when evaluating health risk, because social and economic considerations often influence.'

Why has it taken three years for the medical community to find its voice? Firstly, it takes time to do the work to produce a peer-reviewed study, especially one critical of its pharmaceutical industry masters. Secondly, money talks. All the big pharma research money, grants, fake conferences and lavish destinations are a hard influence to overcome. Big pharma money is now going in so many different directions. Like the proverbial boy with his finger in the dyke, cracks are finally appearing. That's why the misinformation and disinformation bill has been advanced: to get rid of these embarrassing truths in time for the next pharmaceutical industry fundraiser.

Only in the last year have scientists been able to publish articles that acknowledge a high number of serious adverse events, or SAEs, linked to the mRNA based vaccines. There's so much in recent published science that most people are unaware of because of pharmaceutical industry control. Here are the recent top 10 reasons to lock the bastards up. There is the Thacker study. Speed may have come at the cost of data integrity and patient safety, finding FISA falsified and misrepresented data. There is the Facsova study. A study of 99 million doses found clear proof of myocarditis, pericarditis and cerebral thrombosis, and the study extend only for 42 days after each dose, yet we know people are dropping dead suddenly years after they took one in the arm for big pharma. The Fraiman study found the excess risk of serious adverse events of special interest was higher than the risk reduction for COVID-19 hospitalisation relative to the placebo group in both Pfizer and Moderna trials, yet they never said more people would get seriously ill from the injections.

The Benn study found no statistically significant decrease in COVID-19 deaths in the mRNA vaccine trials, while there was actually a small increase in total deaths. Doshi and Lataster's study highlighted counting window failures—that is, how long after injection before an adverse event was counted. Pfizer and their cronies did not count adverse events in the first week after injection, which is when many occurred, and stopped counting after six weeks. This likely led to exaggerated effectiveness and misleading safety pronouncements, including serious adverse events being apportioned to unvaccinated people. The Raethke study noted a rate of serious adverse vaccine reactions of approximately one per 400 people—astonishing!

Mostert's study drew attention to the baffling problem of people dying suddenly years after injection, suggesting it may be the thing they were injected with that caused it. Lataster's study from the University of Sydney, who provided input to this speech, demonstrated there are correlations between COVID-19 vaccination and European excess deaths and found that COVID injections increased the chance of COVID-19 infection and even the chance of COVID-19 death. The Furst study provided evidence that a healthy vaccine participant bias is at play. They only studied healthy people. That further implies that the effectiveness of the COVID-19 vaccines is being exaggerated, beyond the effects of counting window issues and other data manipulations.

This brings us to the latest peer reviewed and published paper from Robin Kobbe and others. It studied children five to 11 years old one year after they had taken Pfizer mRNA vaccines, showing an elevated risk of developing cancer during their entire lives. Published on 30 July 2024 in the Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal, this report studied German children who had two Pfizer injections. This was a longitudinal study following healthy kids through two doses of vaccinations, with the resulting damage clearly attributed to the mRNA injections.

I'll return to this crime of the century in December when I conduct by third COVID inquiry called 'COVID under trial' with leading Australian and international doctors, lawyers and politicians, which will be held before cross-party members of parliament. I promise to hound down this crime's perpetrators, and I will do exactly that.