Hunter was 2 and couldn't speak. Getting him help became his mum's ‘living nightmare'
'Ultimately, we need an early childhood education and care system where equity is baked in from the first three years – this is when our research showed that the gaps were appearing,' she said.
The research was taken from a longitudinal study of Australian children, which assesses 10,000 children and their families and measures early cognitive and developmental differences from children aged birth to five years as well as NAPLAN results.
Tham recommended the federal government provide more Child Care Subsidy funding to childcare centres that enrolled more disadvantaged children.
Researchers said some areas still had poor or no access to childcare, and in some cases quality remained an issue, as did price.
'We know that the first years of life are crucial to the development of children. We also know that, without the right supports in place, disadvantages in early life can have a profound impact on a child's educational journey,' said Tham.
When Belinda's son started at kinder, Our Place - which acts as a glue for families and support services - linked her up with a pediatrician, who she saw within the month.
She says the wraparound services changed Hunter's life. He now sees a speech therapist and Belinda has received parenting support to help manage his behaviour.
'I'm actually enjoying being a parent again,' she said.
She said if parents knew something was wrong, they should ask the right people for help.
'And don't stop at the first stop, don't give up,' Belinda said.
Our Place director Elfie Taylor said their end game was better educational outcomes for children.
She said 'trajectories are really quite set and locked in from six [years old] onwards', when prevention was no longer an option.
'Identifying gaps early and working on them earlier would actually lead to changing trajectories,' Taylor said.

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


7NEWS
9 hours ago
- 7NEWS
Exclusive: Aussies at risk of money and ID fraud as medical shame drives them to buy drugs online from pharmaceutical scammers
Websites claiming to sell pharmaceuticals without need of prescriptions are popping up in the thousands. They are part of a scam phenomenon known as pharma fraud, taking aim at bank accounts globally, and capitalising on the shame that surrounds certain medications. Pills for erectile disfunction, premature ejaculation, male pattern balding, weight loss and bodybuilding are among the medications splashed on the front page of these sites, many of which are directly targeting Australians. Of the 5000 sites globally detected by cyber security company Avast, 41 per cent of the medications were targeting men's sexual health. In the first half of this year alone, Avast blocked 21,000 attacks on Australians. But for those without protective software, which knows these websites and flags them to users, it can be hard to detect that the website is not legitimate, Avast cyber security expert Stephen Kho told A new development in artificial intelligence, known as 'vibe coding' has made it easier than ever for scammers to pump out dozens of dodgy websites a day. The thousands of pharma fraud sites Avast is aware of were likely created by just a few groups of scammers, Kho said. The same technology also makes it harder to distinguish the sites as fakes. 'You can literally talk to an AI chatbot and say, create me a website with a checkout and this kind of wording, for this kind of product, to sell in this colour, and add these features — and it will produce it,' Kho said. 'You can test it, tweak it and deploy it, and suddenly you've got a URL'. Kho said that many pharma fraud sites are made with Australian URLs, display Australian currency, and promote shipping to Australian locations, including one still-operational website which has sighted, but will not make public for safety reasons. 'Some websites look like they are Australian, but are actually located and distributing goods from overseas,' the Therapeutic Health Administration (TGA) said. 'It is so hard to pick these days, it used to be that dodgy spelling made it easy to pick, but nowadays things look glossy and professional and the grammar is good,' Kho said. Like many scams, he says they use 'emotional triggers or a sense of urgency'. Because taboo products are increasingly being made available online, and legitimate sites like Temu 'are also using these urgency tactics', Kho said there is now an additional layer of difficulty to discerning a fake website. Sometimes it is safer to avoid anything that rings alarm bells. 'Look at what regulations we have in Australia, pharmaceuticals are heavily regulated, so that should be ringing alarm bells,' Kho said. 'If a site is not asking for prescriptions, that is clearly dodgy, because you're bypassing it from a safety perspective, but also there can be money lost.' 'Diluted, contaminated, or even just chalk' Kho said that these scam websites can simply take a customer's money and send nothing in return, or they can jeopardise safety by sending unregulated products. The TGA said fake medicine 'could be diluted, contaminated, or even just chalk'. 'Anyone that is willing to break the law to take your money could also be willing to cheat you or risk your health.' Almost a decade ago, The World Health Organisation (WHO) estimated the global annual death toll from counterfeit drugs was about a million. The Australian Federal Police released a warning in May after counterfeit pain relief in NSW, Queensland, Victoria, and the ACT were found to contain synthetic opioids 10 times more potent than fentanyl. Risk of overdose is not the only danger — contamination-related reactions, or simply a lack of protection from nonactive ingredients, all put consumers of counterfeit drugs at risk. 'In the case of diluted antibiotics, understrength medicines contribute to antimicrobial resistance,' TGA said And it can be hard to tell the difference — the image below, the top pill is a legitimate Pfizer product, while the bottom two are fake. The dangerous money-saving measure could also be driving up the cost of legitimate medication. 'Companies spend a lot of money and resources fighting imitation medicines, which, in turn, may lead to higher costs for the consumer,' TGA said. 'We're falling for it' For those hellbent on heading to the checkout on unfamiliar websites, Kho recommends doing a little bit of research first. 'If you get a link to a pharmacy site, instead of clicking on it, do a Google search for that site and first look at reviews,' he said. Negative reviews slamming the site 'is a good indication' it is dodgy. Kho said that it is important that pharma fraud scams are discussed, because they will otherwise fly under the radar. 'Because of the taboo nature, people are probably not even reporting it,' he said 'There's also that thing of buying something without a prescription and not wanted to report it to police for that reason. 'Scammers are really targeting the Australian population, and for whatever reason, we're falling for it. 'We're losing money, and we're probably getting our credentials stolen.'


Perth Now
17 hours ago
- Perth Now
Australian GP's prescribing social interaction to combat increasing experience of loneliness
The Royal Australian College of General Practitioners has thrown its support behind prescribed social interaction to combat increasing loneliness amongst Australians. The Royal Australian College of General Practitioners has thrown its support behind prescribed social interaction to combat increasing loneliness amongst Australians. Credit: cocoparisienne / Pixabay (user cocoparisienne) Australian doctors are recommending a social interaction prescription to combat a growing experience of loneliness. A World Health Organisation report has found that one in six people experience loneliness, and estimates that between 2014-2019 nearly over 850,000 people died from loneliness-related causes. The report found that loneliness may increase the risk of all-cause mortality by nine to 22 per cent in older adults. A separate report from Ending Loneliness Together found that loneliness is experienced by 43 per cent of Australians between the ages of 15 and 25, and that 15 per cent of them experience chronic loneliness persisting across two years. Royal Australian College of General Practitioners president Dr Michael Wright says the use of social prescription can connect patients with non-clinical community services, to fight loneliness. 'Social prescribing is increasingly being recognised as a way to build social well-being into primary care, which we saw when the RACGP joined more than 50 other key health bodies to work towards implementation of social prescribing as a parallel system of care last year,' he said. Social prescribing involves the support of patients by GPs and health professionals in the consideration of taking up hobbies, activities, or joining a community group to combat loneliness. Dr Wright said social disconnection can lead to heart disease, stroke, depression, and anxiety. 'One study found that lacking social connection is as dangerous as smoking up to 15 cigarettes a day,' he said. 'Social connection should be, and increasingly is, a public health priority.' RACGP specific interests social prescribing chair Dr Kulit Singh said support for the approach is growing and could reinforce the role of GPs as preventative and whole-of-person care specialists. 'Social prescribing can strengthen and complement our care in a way that gives patients power and autonomy,' she said. '(It) can be a health approach to addressing the social disconnection we've seen since the pandemic — a script against loneliness.' 'At the moment, there are barriers to more formal adoption of social prescribing. Most general practices don't have access to a link worker who can match patients to activities that meet their social needs.' In March the RACGP called for government and health providers to support social prescribing in regional and rural Australia to combat loneliness factors such as geographic isolation, and limited access to health and social services. A lack of transport, public or private, can mean older regional adults often lack social and health service support. But Dr Singh said support for the approach is growing a could reinforce the role of GPs as preventative and whole-of-person care specialists, referring to a 2022 WHO toolkit to support implementation and a trial program by the Victoria Government across six regions. 'There are opportunities to build networks that support social prescribing,' she said. 'And the nature of social prescribing — making healthy connections around your interests — makes it an approach with real advantages that we all benefit from growing.' In March Dr Singh urged for a focus on regional and rural Australian's, and a nationally coordinated approach to tackle the nation's mental health crisis and ease pressure on the healthcare system. 'We know that people living outside of metro areas experience poorer health outcomes,' she said. 'They face greater barriers accessing healthcare, including other specialist services such as psychologists and psychiatrists.' Dr Wright said Loneliness Awareness Week, which runs from August 4 to 10, highlighted the significance and importance of social connection to a persons health. 'Loneliness Awareness Week has highlighted the harms,' he said. 'What GPs and patients need is support to implement social prescribing as a cure.'

AU Financial Review
a day ago
- AU Financial Review
Trump's trade war is not the only threat to cheap PBS medicines
Despite its shortcomings, the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS) has traditionally worked very effectively to keep medicine prices low for Australian consumers. But Australia's PBS system has recently come under renewed attack from large pharmaceutical companies, which have successfully mobilised the Trump administration to apply pressure here and in other countries with schemes similar to the PBS.