Pubdate: Mon, 04 Jun 2007 Source: Gold Coast Bulletin (Australia) Copyright: 2007 Gold Coast Publications Pty. Ltd Contact: http://www.gcbulletin.com.au/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/620 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) DRUG FIGHT IS MORE THAN SELF-DEFENCE QUEENSLAND Health and the State Government are setting out to be seen as responsible employers by putting hospital staff through self-defence lessons to equip them to handle violent patients. Gold Coasters might well raise an eyebrow at the need for such training. Obnoxious drunks with bloodied noses have been a regular sight in emergency departments since hospitals were introduced and usually -- but not always -- have been pulled into line by the sharp tongue of a nursing sister. So what has changed to prompt Queensland Health to send hospital workers off to a self-defence academy to learn how to try to calm violent patients and, if all else fails, to use force to restrain them? As a Gold Coast Bulletin report revealed on Saturday, violence at the Gold Coast Hospital is not new, with a disturbing litany of attacks on staff by patients, including the death of an experienced nurse in 2005 who had been kicked in the chest by a patient. And last year, the hospital's psychiatric nursing staff threatened to walk off the job, citing fear for their lives due to understaffing and bed shortages in the mental health unit. The healthcare landscape has been changed dramatically by illegal drugs, particularly amphetamines including the drug ice, which are commonly linked with often unexplained violent and anti-social behaviour. Our courts and the wards of hospitals are littered with the tragic consequences of this drug scourge, as are the state's cemeteries. Drunks might sober up relatively quickly, but ice users caught in a living nightmare of drug psychosis are a different story. Training hospital staff to attempt to talk around a drug-crazed maniac and to flatten him in a team tackle if he cannot be subdued by eloquent reasoning might seem a fine idea and a necessary step in workplace health and safety, but reality does not always conform to bureaucratic policy and wishful thinking. Health professionals know that an out-of-control psychiatric patient can have, to use a cliche, the strength of 10 men. The number of security guards at our public hospital was boosted last year. So what message does training staff for violent encounters send? Given the situation hospitals now contend with, we do agree doctors, nurses, ward staff and administrators should have the training to defend themselves, but arming staff with negotiation, psychology and martial arts skills is just one more step backward; another battle lost in the war on drugs. As well as diverting health funds away from priority health matters and into security guards, our taxes are now being used for self-defence lessons for a group of professionals who should not have to look over their shoulders to ensure their own safety while attempting to cure the sick and injured. Meanwhile the gangs that produce and distribute the drugs that cause so much misery continue to profit. They could not care less about ruined lives, violent robberies, heartbreak and a struggling health system. Like fatal road accidents, the terrible statistics of death and broken minds caused by drugs are accepted with a shrug by the public until a family member or friend succumbs to an overdose that kills or one tablet too many that scrambles a brain. Then the drug cancer hits home, but only to the small circle directly affected. Pour more money into the drug war, by all means, but direct it into overturning the rocks the drug vermin -- the drug producers, the bikie gangs, the so-called respectable business people who bankroll drug schemes -- hide under. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake