
Reckoning for Australia's childcare sector after onslaught of abuse cases
Rapid growth, greater risks
In recent years, there has been a nationwide push to give more children access to early childhood education and care, which research indicates has many positive long-term impacts.Millions of dollars have been poured into the sector from federal and state governments, including funding to guarantee three days of childcare for low and middle-income families.
Such measures have prompted rapid growth in the sector, with a rush of new centres opening which has deepened a shortage of qualified staff.The growth has led to "significant vulnerabilities", says Prof Leah Bromfield, director of the Australian Centre for Child Protection."Whenever you grow something really quickly, that comes with risks," she says, listing off a lack of regulation and monitoring, limited training for managers, and the disparate and casual nature of the workforce."You put all that together and you've created a weak system from the perspective of a predatory perpetrator… a system where it's easier to infiltrate."In the wake of the Melbourne child sexual abuse case where Joshua Dale Brown was charged with 70 counts of abuse against eight babies, the federal government gave itself greater powers to strip funding from providers that breach quality and safety standards.Federal Education Minister Jason Clare said the measure was not designed to "shut down centres" but rather increase pressure for them to "raise standards".But Mr Bradshaw wants more. He says taking away funding from a centre "doesn't stop the crime, it just punishes it"."You have to do things that are proactive in nature."
Knee-jerk reactions
The spate of alleged crimes have sparked a heated national conversation about how to better protect kids. Limiting the role of men in childcare is one of the most controversial suggestions.There was a public call to ban men from certain tasks such as changing nappies and taking children to the toilet – though some warned this could place extra pressure on female staff."It's not about banning male educators, but about providing families with agency and informed choice," says Louise Edmonds, an advocate for child sex abuse survivors.Brown's case prompted G8 Education – who owned the centre where he worked - to introduce so-called "intimate care waivers", giving parents and carers the opportunity to choose who carried out private and sensitive duties. It also pledged to install CCTV at all of its centres.
Ms Johnston - who founded child protection group Bravehearts - says these are natural responses, but cautioned that, though "men are definitely a higher risk", women do abuse children too and offenders can do so in all kinds of settings."They are opportunistic… when others don't pay attention, when they are distracted, complacent, disinterested or too trusting, they create 'opportunities' for offenders."Other practical measures centres could adopt to improve child safety include having two educators with direct line of sight of children at all times and getting rid of blind spots in centres - replacing solid doors with glass panes, eliminating windowless walls, and putting more mirrors up to create "incidental supervision"."It's all about reducing opportunities for predators to isolate or conceal in nooks and crannies," Ms Johnston says.
Hiding in plain sight
But massive system reform is also long overdue, experts say.In 2017, more than 400 recommendations emerged from a years-long royal commission into child sex abuse in institutional settings – like churches, schools and childcare - but critics say progress has stalled on some of the most significant changes.One of those outstanding recommendations, to be discussed by the country's attorneys-general at a meeting this month, is to overhaul Australia's checks on those who work with children.Currently, each state and territory complete what is essentially a police check required for those who work alongside children, but they don't share the information with each other. Advocates have called for a nationalised system, but some say the checks themselves don't go far enough."It's inconsistent, relies too heavily on prior convictions," Ms Edmonds says.For instance, many say, the system should capture red flags such as formal complaints, workplace warnings, police intelligence, and people identified as alleged abusers in confidential applications to the national redress scheme set up after the royal commission.Casting a broader net is important, experts argue, as child abuse allegations can be difficult to stand up in court. Often the witnesses are young children, who are either non-verbal or have limited vocabulary, may struggle with memory, and often have a lack of situational understanding."Catching someone red-handed and being able to prove it beyond reasonable doubt is almost impossible," Ms Johnston says.
That's why Prof Bromfield is among those calling for a national registration scheme for the childcare sector – like those that exist for doctors or teachers. It would require workers to prove their qualifications, could provide a detailed work history, and would bind them all by a code of conduct.Advocates argue the system could also capture many of the things the working- with-children checks currently do not."Often in child sexual abuse cases, when you look back, you see lots and lots of red flags," Prof Bromfield says."There might be a pattern, but [at the moment] we just don't see that because they are moving between states or between sectors or between providers."Mr Bradshaw says having access to more information about staff would help parents like him make informed decisions.Childcare is a necessity for his family, he explains, as he works full-time and his wife, a high school teacher, works four days a week.But often, there's little detail about the childcare centre's staff "beyond the pictures on the wall" of the teachers and educators, so parents often have to assess a provider "based on vibes"."It's a bit of a blackbox and you're bound because you need to have your kids in childcare so you can pay for living in a big city."That's where greater education for parents is needed too, Prof Bromfield says, so they know what questions to ask and, in the worst-case scenarios, how to spot signs of grooming themselves.Tips include enquiring about a provider's child safety policies, asking about its staff turnover, and assessing the physical spaces for any visibility issues.
There also needs to be better, more regular training for managers in the sector on how to prevent and identify problematic behaviour or patterns, experts say.For Prof Bromfield - who was part of the team which conducted the royal commission into child sex abuse – these are conversations she has been having for over a decade.But she is hopeful the current crisis will shock Australia into taking greater action."Perhaps one of the things that will happen is there will be greater political will to prioritise safety for children," Prof Bromfield says."The big lesson is that we can never rest on our laurels when it comes to children's safety."Perpetrators just keep getting smarter, working around the systems we've got. We can't forget the lessons of the past… and we can't assume that this is a problem that's gone away."
Hashtags

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


Daily Mail
19 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Footy star opens up about the religious psychosis that landed him in a treatment facility: 'I thought I was supposed to save the world'
Taylan May has opened up about the religious psychosis had to overcome in order to resurrect his NRL career, admitting he was 'thinking I was someone I wasn't'. Taylan May faced multiple off-field controversies during his NRL career, including being found guilty of assaulting a teenage footy fan in 2021, which led to a two-match suspension that was controversially delayed. He was also fined for breaching the league's code of conduct. May spent 436 days out of the NRL while facing domestic violence charges that were eventually withdrawn, battling mental demons and trying to win his private fight to return to top-flight rugby league. But it was a long journey back, as he revealed on the Mayday podcast with his brother and Wests Tigers teammate Terrell, opening up on his time in a mental health treatment facility and the nightmare battles he had at his lowest ebb. That included thinking he had become a kind of messiah or messenger of God sent to save the world. 'I felt like I needed to check myself in, obviously,' May said of his stint receiving professional treatment. 'I saw how much it affected the family. Obviously I was saying some outrageous things and thinking I was someone I wasn't. 'I full believed I was this person who was supposed to go save the world. I got stuck in a religious psychosis. I read the whole New Testament [of the Bible] in a week.' That wasn't the only delusion or dissociation that Taylan was battling with. When he checked into the treatment facility, he revealed that he didn't know where he was and at times thought he was back at footy training. 'I remember at the start of the psych ward, like before you go in, introductions, they ask you all these questions,' he said. 'I full thought they were on my team. I didn't realise they were just ticking off the markers, trying to figure out where to put me.' It all helped May put things into perspective and realise just how tolerant his loved ones had been, staying by his side even during his scary dissociative states. 'That taught me how close our family actually is, even though they don't show it … There was one of the times I remember it was me, dad and my wife, I preached to them for like two days straight,' he said. 'That moment in that room there was something I can't explain. It was something I will cherish forever, even though I was out of it.' Exiting the treatment clinic was not the end of Taylan's battle, though - it was just the beginning. 'I knew I could get back and I knew the talent that I had, and I didn't want to waste it,' he said. 'I knew what it took to get back and I knew how hard it was.' Despite fighting hard, training with his brothers and knowing what was required of him, Taylan still battled mental demons. 'I kept getting pulled back occasionally,' he said. 'I was training really hard, I thought, stuff this. 'It got to a point, I think four months in ... where I just hit a slump. 'I wouldn't even go outside my room. 'It was weird, it was like I was back down in lockdown when I was in the psych ward. 'I wouldn't leave my room, I wouldn't want to go for a walk, but I get like that heaps, where I don't want to see people, I'm even like that now. 'It's like my safe haven, the room ... but it's a bad habit, because it puts you in your own head - a lot.' But with the right treatment and support May was able to exit his room and his own head to lock down and earn his place back at the NRL table. On June 10, Wests Tigers announced they had signed the former Penrith flyer on a train and trial agreement for the rest of the 2025 season. Even then, May had lingering doubts and could only think about how sore his body was from training ahead of his return. 'I was like complaining to my wife, "How am I going to do this?" 'That [NSW] Cup game [the week before], it took it out of me. 'How am I going to get my body to feel decent to play? That was my main thought.' But May did get through that match, finishing with a try and two try assists as he helped the Tigers on their way to a tense 21-20 victory over the Gold Coast Titans. Taylan said his time away from the game taught him resilience and discipline, and how much of both was required to climb the mountain and reach the NRL for a second time. 'It's taught me to never give up,' he said. 'Always believe in yourself, because at the end of the day it is always going to be yourself.


Daily Mail
19 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Urgent warning about the rise of a deadly disease spreading in Australia - and it can cause people to go blind
A deadly Victorian-era STI that was nearly eradicated in the early 2000s is making a comeback, infecting a rising number of women in major Australian cities across the country. Federal government figures show syphilis among women of childbearing age increased by five per cent in one year and is up 20 per cent over a five-year period. The bacterial infection, once rampant in the 1800s, is primarily transmitted through oral, vaginal, and anal sex and can also spread during pregnancy. Often dubbed a silent disease, syphilis may show no symptoms for years, and when symptoms do appear, they typically begin 10 to 90 days after infection. It is treatable with antibiotics. Untreated cases can eventually lead to serious complications, including blindness, paralysis, organ damage, dementia, and death. The Royal Australian College of GPs said last year 8,928 cases of syphilis were reported in Australia, compared to 3,881 a decade ago, and 1,962 cases in 2004. RACGP sexual health expert Sara Whitburn said the geography of syphilis infections is changing, shifting from remote and rural northern Australia to large cities, with NSW and Victoria recording the highest percentage of infections in 2025. Dr Whitburn said she was seeing more women presenting at GPs with symptoms of an STD but were often shocked when they tested positive for syphilis. 'People might be aware of chlamydia, but still are often quite shocked to have chlamydia, even though it's very, very common,' she said. 'And then syphilis, I think people think of this as, you know, oh, isn't that a Victorian era disease seen in literature and movies.' Dr Whitburn added that the widespread use of PrEP (Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis) among gay and bisexual men to prevent HIV infection had partly led to an increase in syphilis infections, as it was linked to a decline in condom use in that group. 'When there is people who cross from those populations to non-Indigenous women, women who might have partners who also identify as gay bisexual men, we start to see syphilis in those populations,' she said. 'With COVID and the lockdown, people have perhaps forgotten a little bit around negotiating and communicating around safer sex.' Dr Whitburn partly attributed the rise in syphilis among women of childbearing age to better screening, given pregnant women are particularly at risk, with the infection known to cause stillbirths and miscarriages, as babies can contract the disease while in the womb. 'We're really actively looking to screen for syphilis in that age group because we know that it can actually cause congenital syphilis, which can be life threatening, or can cause quite significant illnesses.' Curtin University epidemiologist Dr Jennifer Dunne told newsGP new research found congenital syphilis triples the risk of preterm birth. Left untreated, congenital syphilis can cause blindness, deafness, intellectual disabilities, and skeletal deformities in babies - and can be fatal. Of 100 cases of congenital syphilis reported between 2016 and 2024, there were 33 deaths recorded. According to the National Syphilis Surveillance quarterly report, rising syphilis cases among women of reproductive age have coincided with a record number of diagnoses of congenital syphilis in 2023, the highest since 1995, and the highest number of related infant deaths ever recorded in a single year. Worryingly, up to a quarter of women were unaware they had syphilis until they were tested during pregnancy. Dr Dunne said the findings reinforce the need for changes in STI testing during pregnancy amid the 'potentially devastating outcomes' for parents. 'Current STI screenings happen early in pregnancy, but we need additional checks later in pregnancy, especially in high-risk areas,' she said. Syphilis was almost entirely eradicated in Australia by the early 2000s, but cases have exploded following an outbreak in north-west Queensland in 2011. Since then, the disease has spread nationwide. In response to rising rates, the Australian Government launched the National Syphilis and Surveillance Monitoring Plan in 2021, with one key goal: reducing syphilis incidence among women of reproductive age. Suburbs within Sydney's affluent inner city, such as Newtown, Surry Hills, and Zetland, have seen a spike in syphilis cases, according to the latest quarterly report. Rising syphilis infections is a trend being seen across the globe, with one in every 1,000 people in parts of England testing positive, as officials warn cases have reached the highest level since 1948. The World Health Organisation estimates 8 million adults between 15 and 49 years old acquired syphilis in 2022 alone. It has a global initiative for the elimination of congenital syphilis. There is no vaccine against syphilis.


Daily Mail
19 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Stunning court decision for Army major accused of drowning his wife and claiming $1million life insurance as he walks out of jail
A retired Australian Army major accused of drowning his wife five years ago has been granted bail after their daughters agreed to provide $100,000 of $250,000 in security. Graeme Davidson will be released from a Brisbane prison after Justice Tom Sullivan delivered his determination on Friday in the Queensland Supreme Court. Davidson will be required to report daily to police and not go within 5km of any international point of departure such as airports or cruise ship terminals. Daughters Brooke and Robyn - one a high school teacher and the other a nurse - will each provide $50,000 and one of their partners will lodge $150,000 as security. The dual British-Australian citizen will have to abide by an 8pm curfew, wear a monitoring device and surrender both his UK and Australian passports. Justice Sullivan said the Crown had accepted its case against Davidson 'could not be described as strong'. 'I have decided to treat the case in a neutral way,' he said. 'I have otherwise formed the view... the identified statutory risks can be ameliorated by appropriate conditions.' 'The nature of this alleged murder and the alleged motive... does not raise the prospect of reoffending in a similar way.' Retired Australian Army major Graeme Davidson moved to Thailand and married a younger woman after allegedly drowning his wife Jacqueline. The former couple is pictured Scottish-born Davidson, who also served in the British Army, is accused of murdering his wife Jacqueline, 54, during a kayaking trip in November 2020. He is further accused of fraud offences over two claims on his wife's life insurance policies worth more than $1million following what police originally determined to be an accidental death. Davidson moved to the Thai resort town of Hua Hin four months after his wife's death and married local woman Pick Pattraporn in December 2022. On Wednesday, the court heard Davidson had texted a friend while living in Thailand in 2023, describing himself as a 'cliché'. 'There are lots of divorcees out here, because there are no de facto laws and you can't lose 50 per cent of your s***,' he allegedly wrote. Justice Sullivan noted the daughters' relationship with both their father and the woman he was accused of killing: 'She was their mother.' Ms Davidson drowned on November 27, 2020 at Lake Samsonvale, near Forgan Cove in Queensland 's Moreton Bay region, while kayaking with her husband. Davidson was arrested in Brisbane in May while visiting family, after a coronial investigation led police to believe he had murdered his wife. Davidson's barrister Craig Eberhardt KC said on Wednesday the evidence against his client was unable to rule out the possibility his wife had accidentally drowned. 'It's at best a weak circumstantial case,' he told the court. Mr Eberhardt described Davidson as a law-abiding citizen with no criminal record who received 'very substantial' pensions from his service in the British and Australian armies. He said Davidson had maintained contact with Queensland Police and the coroner for the past five years and submitted there was no suggestion he had the means to flee to Thailand or anywhere else. 'It's not as if he's Tony Mokbel,' Mr Eberhardt said, referring to the one-time fugitive Victorian drug baron. 'Even Tony Mokbel was caught ten years later. 'The idea that suddenly he'd be able to escape is just pure speculation, even if he wanted to.' Mr Eberhardt said Davidson had not 'fled' Australia after his wife's death but had gone to Thailand because many of his friends and former colleagues were there. 'He went up there just to see if he liked it, not to move,' Mr Eberhardt told the court. Prosecutor Caroline Marco conceded the Crown's case against Davidson was circumstantial but said that did not make it weak. Instead, various threads of evidence - including inconsistencies in Davidson's version of events - could collectively convince a jury he was guilty of killing his wife. Ms Marco said Davidson's statements to police about what happened the day his wife drowned were inconsistent and varied with what he had told friends. Davidson told police his wife had fallen into the water from a seated position in her kayak but allegedly told a friend she 'jumped or dove'. Ms Marco said there were also inconsistencies regarding Davidson's explanation of his phone's whereabouts at the time. That phone has never been found. 'There had to be a reason why it could not be used to render assistance to Jacqueline,' she told the court. Ms Marco said Ms Davidson was a capable swimmer and had no known medical condition which would cause her to lose consciousness and fall into the water. The Crown contends the Davidsons' marriage was in trouble before Ms Davidson died. Davidson claims his wife had no intention of leaving him but the court heard she had discussed separation with friends following an affair her husband had while posted in Papua New Guinea. On Wednesday, Ms Marco said Ms Davidson had told two friends she had spoken to her husband about divorce and he had resisted the idea. Davidson had allegedly told his wife he did not wish to separate due to the financial impact it would have on him. Ms Marco also said Ms Davidson had sent 'secret' Facebook messages to a friend in early 2020 which were set to disappear after being read. 'The secret messages that would delete, in my submission, are not consistent with an assertion that at that time there were not ongoing or lingering problems,' she said. The court heard Davidson received a $460,000 payout from the Australian Army four months before his wife's death and that he opened a separate bank account solely in his name three days before she drowned. Ms Marco said Davidson had returned to Australia only twice since his wife's death - once when he was arrested - and in mid-2023 sold the marital home for $1.55million. Last week, Mr Eberhardt argued the prosecution's case was 'fundamentally weak' and relied almost entirely on a comment made during a conversation in 2017. According to Mr Eberhardt, the remark was made while Davidson and a friend were discussing another man whose wife had left him on the day of his retirement, taken half of his pension, and then moved to Thailand. In response, Davidson allegedly said, 'Oh s*** yeah, I'd kill her and move to Thailand too.' Mr Eberhardt dismissed the comment as nothing more than 'a quip' and insisted it was 'not nearly as sinister as it sounds' with the context. Justice Sullivan noted the prosecution's case did not include 'direct evidence of murder,' and Mr Eberhardt said there was no evidence Ms Davidson had been 'violently assaulted' by her husband. The court heard Ms Davidson's body showed only minor bruising, which Davidson's defence argued was consistent with his efforts to rescue her and perform CPR. Mr Eberhardt said the couple had been about 10m apart on the water when Davidson attempted to 'show off' by standing up on his kayak. 'Jacqueline became distressed about that and used the 'safe word'… designed to let him know that she was concerned about what he was doing,' he told the court. Davidson claimed he then saw his wife fall into the water and dived in to rescue her. But he struggled to locate her in the 'murky' and weed-filled lake. He eventually dragged her to shore where he performed CPR and called for help. Neither was wearing a life jacket, with Davidson allegedly telling police their vests had been destroyed by rats while the couple was still living in Bondi, in Sydney's east. Mr Eberhardt said a witness had confirmed hearing this explanation prior to Ms Davidson's death. In response to the life insurance fraud allegations, Mr Eberhardt said both Mr Davidson and his wife had taken out claims in each other's favour in mid-2020. 'There is no evidence the setting up of the insurance policies was the applicant's idea,' the defence lawyer said last week. Mr Eberhardt argued on Wednesday it would have been 'far more suspicious' if Davidson had not attempted to access her life insurance following her death. The court also heard how Mr Davidson was recorded on CCTV burning 'a small number of documents' in his backyard the night after his wife drowned, while one of his children was at home. However, Mr Eberhardt dismissed the footage as 'not evidence of anything' since it was unclear what the documents contained.