
Ambos fight mental health care unit
Some of NSW's most specialist paramedics have launched workplace action as the paramedics union seeks to challenge the rollout of a new mental health unit trial they claim will put staff safety at risk.
Paramedics have vowed not to support the Mental Health Co-Response Team (MHRCT) trial which is due to commence on May 12, including the reallocation of resources or participating in training.
The Australian Paramedics Association of NSW says the MHRCT would redirect Specialised Operations Paramedics away from critical rescue and high-risk responses to 'staff an untested model'.
'Our patients in need of mental healthcare deserve better than being treated as an afterthought. They deserve permanent, evidence-based solutions,' APA NSW Assistant Secretary Gary Wilson said.
'This action is about safety. The safety of paramedics, of our nursing colleagues, and our patients. These safety risks have been raised on an ongoing basis with representatives of the employer since February.'
Mr Wilson said only a handful of paramedics were trained as Specialised Operations Paramedics, and that it was 'crucial they are available when their specialist skills are required like Bondi' stabbing.
'If our extremely limited SOT resources are used to cover for (NSW) Health's failure to provide appropriate mental health services rather than treated as the scarce, highly specialised essential resources they are safety will continue to be compromised,' he said. The 12-week trial is due to begin on May 12. NewsWire/ Tim Pascoe Credit: News Corp Australia
'Will SOT be available the next time a patient trapped in a fire zone needs medical assistance, or will the assistance for members of the community again depend on our road paramedics selflessly entering a situation they are untrained for, putting themselves at risk in the process.
'This should never be a choice they have to make.'
The union has called on NSW Ambulance to cease plans to use SOT paramedics for the trial, and instead expand upon the 'highly successful, evidence-based Mental Health Acute Assessment Team model'.
The APA said they had also requested for the dispute to be urgently listed at the Industrial Relations Commission.
It is due to be heard on May 12.
In a statement, a NSW Ambulance spokesperson said the safety of clinicians, patients, and the community was the 'top priority', and that the paramedics would remain available for incidents requiring specialist expertise.
'The Mental Health Clinician Response Team (MHCRT) trial involves NSW Ambulance Special Operations Team (SOT) paramedics working with NSW Health mental health nurses hosted by Western Sydney Local Health District,' the spokesman said.
'The trial aims to improve the experience for mental health patients by providing a rapid response, assessment and referral to the most appropriate mental health pathway, and by reducing emergency department presentations.
'NSW Ambulance assures the community that SOT qualified paramedics will remain available for incidents that require their specialist skills.'
The spokesman said the 12-week trial would allow SOT paramedics to 'leverage their unique skills to treat and assess mental health patients in collaboration with the specialist nurses'.
'In the event the unit is dispatched to a non-mental health emergency incident, the mental health nurse would not be required to provide health care outside their scope of practice,' the spokesman said.
'During the consultation period, an assessment of risks and control measures regarding MHCRT was undertaken and shared with the Australian Paramedics Association (APA) and other stakeholders.
'NSW Ambulance is committed to continue these discussions in the Industrial Relations Commission early next week.'

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

ABC News
7 hours ago
- ABC News
GoodSam app volunteer Ashlin Fisher saves neighbour in cardiac arrest
When Geoff Percival collapsed in cardiac arrest and his partner called triple-0, it was not a paramedic who was the first responder; it was neighbour Ashlin Fisher. A few months earlier, the young mum from Broulee on the New South Wales south coast had downloaded NSW Ambulance's GoodSam responder application to her phone. The time had come to put it to the test. "It's a very loud, alarming alert … and I realised what it was and I had to run out the door," Ms Fisher said. When she arrived that fateful day in March last year, the 63-year-old was unconscious, and his partner was performing cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). "I explained as best I could who I was and what I was … I asked her to put the phone on loudspeaker … and very quickly I didn't have to make any real decisions, triple-0 was just giving me instructions on what to do," she said. The frantic triple-0 call recorded the moment Ms Fisher arrived, with the operator responding: "We've got a GoodSam here? OK, alright … we're up to 300 compressions, I need you to keep going until that ambulance arrives." As Ms Fisher counted the compression alongside the operator, ambulance sirens blared in the background, and within two minutes a paramedic was in the room. Then the operator said, "Is that the paramedic on scene with you? OK, I'll leave you with them, you've all done a really good job, all the best now." Mr Percival recently got the chance to thank his good Samaritan. "I just think it was so lucky that she was able to respond. [My partner] was doing CPR on me … and Ashlin came along and I think you said, 'Can I take over?' and she said, 'Yes, please,'" he said. "It was good to have a third person come in and have some idea what to do until the paramedics arrived. According to NSW Ambulance, it takes a paramedic an average of nine to 10 minutes to reach a heart attack case. The GoodSam app aims to bridge that gap and is available to anyone 18 or older and able to perform CPR. When needed, an alarm on the responder's phone rings, and the person is asked if they can help. If they can, they receive the patient's address along with the location of any nearby defibrillator. GoodSam began in NSW in 2023, and so far about 9,600 volunteers have registered. NSW Ambulance GoodSam project officer Monika Sitkowski said volunteers had given CPR to 54 patients who had survived. "They're not getting oxygen into their vital organs, especially their brain, so we need to get volunteers who are nearby to start that CPR process and keep them alive until paramedics arrive. "[GoodSam] is about saving your neighbours. It's about saving your friends and family. There's a huge increase in survival when you've got early CPR to that person in need." NSW Ambulance said it was aiming for 50,000 registered volunteers across the state. "That would probably mean that there's a GoodSam responder nearby to every person who goes into cardiac arrest," Ms Sitkowski said. Versions of the GoodSam app are also used in South Australia and Victoria, while Western Australia's St John Ambulance has a similar app.


West Australian
7 days ago
- West Australian
Huge boost for Reds as Crusaders call on All Blacks
Harry Wilson has been named to start for the Queensland Reds against a Crusaders team stacked with All Blacks for their Super Rugby Pacific qualifying final. The incumbent Wallabies captain looked at long odds to play when he ran off in obvious pain late in Saturday's defeat of the Fijian Drua, just two games into his return from a fractured arm. But precautionary scans cleared Wilson to return to training this week. The influential No.8 trained on Tuesday and has been named to start in what is forecast to be a cold, wet Friday-night encounter. Wilson starred when the Reds ended a 25-year winning drought in Christchurch last year. He has always been highly rated across the ditch, earning glowing praise from then Crusaders coach Scott Robertson, now helming the All Blacks, after his 2020 Super Rugby debut. "It's really pleasing news for us but, more importantly, for Harry. He's come through the early part of the week well," coach Les Kiss said."He's a true competitor when it comes to battles against the New Zealand sides and their top back rows." Versatile forward Seru Uru (knee) has not been recalled despite training on Tuesday, the Reds' pack unchanged for a third straight game. Centre Dre Pakeho returns to the bench with Harry McLaughlin-Phillips (HIA) sidelined, while Filipo Daugunu will start on the wing and Tim Ryan will come off the bench. The Crusaders, who won five consecutive Super Rugby titles either side of the COVID-19 impacted 2020-21 seasons, are on a 16-game finals winning streak dating back to 2016. They have never lost a finals game at home and have won 13 of their past 14 games against the Reds. Fullback Will Jordan is back, while captain David Havili returns at centre, the pair among 10 All Blacks in the Crusaders' starting 15. Former Reds playmaker James O'Connor, hunting a feel-good Wallabies recall ahead of the British and Irish Lions series, will come off the bench. "This is a strong team, and I can't wait to unleash them come Friday," coach Rob Penney said. REDS: Sef Fa'agase, Richie Asiata, Zane Nonggorr, Josh Canham, Ryan Smith, Joe Brial, Fraser McReight, Harry Wilson, Tate McDermott, Tom Lynagh, Filipo Daugunu, Hunter Paisami, Josh Flook, Lachie Anderson, Jock Campbell. Reserves: Josh Nasser, Jeffery Toomaga-Allen, Nick Bloomfield, Angus Blyth, John Bryant, Kalani Thomas, Dre Pakeho, Tim Ryan. CRUSADERS: Tamaiti Williams, Codie Taylor, Fletcher Newell, Scott Barrett, Antonio Shalfoon, Ethan Blackadder, Tom Christie, Christian Lio-Willie, Noah Hotham, Rivez Reihana, Sevu Reece, David Havili (c), Braydon Ennor, Chay Fihaki, Will Jordan. Replacements: George Bell, George Bower, Kershawl Sykes-Martin, Jamie Hannah, Cullen Grace, Kyle Preston, James O'Connor, Johnny McNicholl.


Perth Now
7 days ago
- Perth Now
Huge boost for Reds as Crusaders call on All Blacks
Harry Wilson has been named to start for the Queensland Reds against a Crusaders team stacked with All Blacks for their Super Rugby Pacific qualifying final. The incumbent Wallabies captain looked at long odds to play when he ran off in obvious pain late in Saturday's defeat of the Fijian Drua, just two games into his return from a fractured arm. But precautionary scans cleared Wilson to return to training this week. The influential No.8 trained on Tuesday and has been named to start in what is forecast to be a cold, wet Friday-night encounter. Wilson starred when the Reds ended a 25-year winning drought in Christchurch last year. He has always been highly rated across the ditch, earning glowing praise from then Crusaders coach Scott Robertson, now helming the All Blacks, after his 2020 Super Rugby debut. "It's really pleasing news for us but, more importantly, for Harry. He's come through the early part of the week well," coach Les Kiss said."He's a true competitor when it comes to battles against the New Zealand sides and their top back rows." Versatile forward Seru Uru (knee) has not been recalled despite training on Tuesday, the Reds' pack unchanged for a third straight game. Centre Dre Pakeho returns to the bench with Harry McLaughlin-Phillips (HIA) sidelined, while Filipo Daugunu will start on the wing and Tim Ryan will come off the bench. The Crusaders, who won five consecutive Super Rugby titles either side of the COVID-19 impacted 2020-21 seasons, are on a 16-game finals winning streak dating back to 2016. They have never lost a finals game at home and have won 13 of their past 14 games against the Reds. Fullback Will Jordan is back, while captain David Havili returns at centre, the pair among 10 All Blacks in the Crusaders' starting 15. Former Reds playmaker James O'Connor, hunting a feel-good Wallabies recall ahead of the British and Irish Lions series, will come off the bench. "This is a strong team, and I can't wait to unleash them come Friday," coach Rob Penney said. REDS: Sef Fa'agase, Richie Asiata, Zane Nonggorr, Josh Canham, Ryan Smith, Joe Brial, Fraser McReight, Harry Wilson, Tate McDermott, Tom Lynagh, Filipo Daugunu, Hunter Paisami, Josh Flook, Lachie Anderson, Jock Campbell. Reserves: Josh Nasser, Jeffery Toomaga-Allen, Nick Bloomfield, Angus Blyth, John Bryant, Kalani Thomas, Dre Pakeho, Tim Ryan. CRUSADERS: Tamaiti Williams, Codie Taylor, Fletcher Newell, Scott Barrett, Antonio Shalfoon, Ethan Blackadder, Tom Christie, Christian Lio-Willie, Noah Hotham, Rivez Reihana, Sevu Reece, David Havili (c), Braydon Ennor, Chay Fihaki, Will Jordan. Replacements: George Bell, George Bower, Kershawl Sykes-Martin, Jamie Hannah, Cullen Grace, Kyle Preston, James O'Connor, Johnny McNicholl.