
Data registry funds plea in fight against MND
Motor neurone disease (MND) robs individuals of the ability to walk, talk, swallow, and eventually breathe, as it impairs nerve cells responsible for transmitting signals from the brain and spinal cord to the muscles.
With no known cure and limited treatment options, health advocates are calling on the government to launch a data registry with $12 million needed to know the extent of the illness nationwide and target specific support to affected patients.
One of them is 41-year-old Canberra mother Sharon who is confined to a wheelchair.
She started noticing a slight limp and other minor issues with her right leg and foot when she was playing netball.
Within six months of being diagnosed in 2018 she started using a walker for short distances and a scooter for longer distances.
She later had a feeding tube inserted and transitioned to using a wheelchair.
"MND impacts every part of my body and every aspect of my life, but I'm just as intelligent and switched on as I've ever been," she said.
The mother of two of boys communicates using an eye-gaze technology machine which converts pre-recorded sentences into words and has documented her journey on social media.
"MND is not an incurable disease, we just haven't found the cure yet."
More research needs to be done and consolidated through a national database on the causes of the disease, MND Australia CEO Clare Sullivan said.
"It's one of those diseases we still don't know a lot about, there's no specific diagnosis," she told AAP.
"You have to exclude everything else, and then you're left with motor neurone disease.
"That also goes to why we need better data. We don't even know how many people in Australia have motor neurone disease."
It's estimated that it affects about one in 10,000 people with about 2700 people in the country battling the degenerative condition, according to official figures extrapolated from different sources.
The average life expectancy for a person diagnosed with MND is between two to three years.
In a report published by the peak body earlier this year, it put the cost of the devastating disease at about $4.85 billion based on lost productivity, the unpaid carer burden and direct healthcare system costs.
"As a country, we can be much more empathetic and inclusive of people with disabilities," Ms Sullivan said.

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The Advertiser
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Ensuring the program was in place before children were moved from the scheme was reassuring, People with Disability acting chief executive Megan Spindler-Smith told AAP. The minister said while one-in-50 people had a significant disability which would be covered by the NDIS, one-in-five young children were on the autism spectrum or had a developmental delay. Parents had little choice but to put their children with autism on a scheme designed for permanent disability, Mr Butler said. "Families who were looking for additional supports in mainstream services can't find them because they largely don't exist anymore and in that, all governments have failed them," he said. Mr Butler said the changes would help to bring down the cost of the NDIS, with taxpayers set to fork out more than $52 billion for the scheme in 2025/26. Laws passed in 2024 put in place a cap on spending growth of eight per cent per year. 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Disability Minister Mark Butler used a speech at the National Press Club on Wednesday to say the NDIS was not the right fit for the growing number of children on the autism spectrum or with development delays. A separate program called Thriving Kids will be set up to focus on those children previously covered by the NDIS. It will begin rolling out from July 2026 and be fully implemented by July 2027. Children with autism on the NDIS would not be steered from the scheme until supports were fully rolled out, the minister said. "I know this will be hard for some parents to hear and I don't say it lightly," Mr Butler said in the speech. "We need as a matter of some urgency to create a better system that will enable our children to thrive. "Diverting this group of kids over time from the NDIS is an important element of making the scheme sustainable and returning it to its original intent." Medicare items for occupational therapy, speech pathology and psychosocial therapy would be considered for the program, including a bulk-billed check-up for three-year-olds, Mr Butler said. The government would start by making a $2 billion contribution, matched by states and territories. Early intervention strategies were key for ensuring children received the right support, Autism Awareness chief executive Nicole Rogerson said. "(Thriving Kids) potentially has the opportunity to be a once-in-a-generation change in how we look at developmental pediatrics," she told AAP. She said what Mr Butler was doing was "pretty rare for a politician" because he was "owning what the problem is". Ensuring the program was in place before children were moved from the scheme was reassuring, People with Disability acting chief executive Megan Spindler-Smith told AAP. The minister said while one-in-50 people had a significant disability which would be covered by the NDIS, one-in-five young children were on the autism spectrum or had a developmental delay. Parents had little choice but to put their children with autism on a scheme designed for permanent disability, Mr Butler said. "Families who were looking for additional supports in mainstream services can't find them because they largely don't exist anymore and in that, all governments have failed them," he said. Mr Butler said the changes would help to bring down the cost of the NDIS, with taxpayers set to fork out more than $52 billion for the scheme in 2025/26. Laws passed in 2024 put in place a cap on spending growth of eight per cent per year. But the minister said the existing level of growth was unsustainable and a cap of between five and six per cent would be more effective. 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The minister said while one-in-50 people had a significant disability which would be covered by the NDIS, one-in-five young children were on the autism spectrum or had a developmental delay. Parents had little choice but to put their children with autism on a scheme designed for permanent disability, Mr Butler said. "Families who were looking for additional supports in mainstream services can't find them because they largely don't exist anymore and in that, all governments have failed them," he said. Mr Butler said the changes would help to bring down the cost of the NDIS, with taxpayers set to fork out more than $52 billion for the scheme in 2025/26. Laws passed in 2024 put in place a cap on spending growth of eight per cent per year. But the minister said the existing level of growth was unsustainable and a cap of between five and six per cent would be more effective. 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17 hours ago
- West Australian
When the end is near, psychedelics may ease the anguish
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Perth Now
17 hours ago
- Perth Now
When the end is near, psychedelics may ease the anguish
Psychedelics could significantly alleviate the anguish, debilitating depression and death-anxiety often experienced by the terminally ill but its implications could be much more profound, clinicians say. In an Australian-first, a near three-year clinical trial examined the use of psilocybin - a naturally occurring compound found in some species of mushrooms - in combination with psychotherapy for dozens of people living with crippling, life-threatening illness. Psychologist Margaret Ross and psychiatrist Justin Dwyer, who co-led the study, said the drug was able to ease the debilitating death-related anxiety and depression experienced by many palliative care patients. "When you're told you're going to die, your entire world collapses ... it's the final unknowable frontier," Dr Dwyer told AAP. "Many people find themselves stranded in this endless moment of waiting to die, just waiting for the axe to fall ... with that, comes crushing feelings of despair." There are few treatments available for people experiencing distress around dying. Between January 2020 and October 2023, 35 terminally ill participants were given psilocybin over two eight-hour treatment sessions several weeks apart at St Vincent's Hospital in Melbourne. Both sessions were accompanied by nine psychotherapy sessions before and after dosing. The trial's findings have been published in General Hospital Psychiatry. Those in the study reported significant reductions in depression and anxiety as well as sustained gains in mood, outlook, and wellbeing within 24 hours of treatment. But Dr Dwyer said these results only touched the surface. "Many patients reported having a transformational experience," he said. "They felt they had a sense of being back in life in a richer, more vibrant way. "One patient said they felt saturated with a divinity that wasn't there before." While results are promising, the clinicians emphasised psychedelic-assisted therapy is still in its early stages. "It didn't work for everyone," Dr Dwyer cautioned. "And it shouldn't be a treatment open slather for all." Melbourne psychiatrist Eli Kotler is among a handful of Australian doctors able to prescribe psychedelic medication and agreed the treatment needs to used cautiously. Dr Kotler said psychedelics such as psilocybin help with human suffering, a condition he believes is at the heart of the St Vincent's study for those confronting dying. "In many ways mental health has lost it's heart and soul and runs the risk of treating psychiatric diagnoses rather than helping humans heal," he told AAP. Psilocybin appears to work by changing the way parts of the brain connect and interact. But Dr Dwyer says whilst there are theories, nobody really knows how the drug works. In recent years, there has been an explosion of interest in its therapeutic effects with half-a-dozen studies underway in Australia, and many more in the pipeline. Psilocybin and MDMA have been able to be prescribed by approved psychiatrists for certain mental health conditions since July of 2023. Lifeline 13 11 14 beyondblue 1300 22 4636