CHILDREN

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

Improving the health of children and youth is a priority of the NSW Government and South Western Sydney Area Health Service (SWSAHS). It is acknowledged that there is a lack of consistency in defining the population of young people. This Plan will focus on children aged 0-14 years of age. This group comprises 24% of the Area’s population and has the challenge of promoting good health and effectively treating illness to maximise outcome in adulthood.

The Strategic Plan for Health Improvement for Children in South Western Sydney has been developed with reference to national and statewide initiatives regarding the health of children and the specific goals of SWSAHS.

In June 1995, Health Ministers endorsed a national health policy for children and young people, The Health of Young Australians. This policy encompasses a broad social view of health, and sets out a national framework within which the States and Territories can develop and implement detailed responses to agreed policy directions.

The Health of Young Australians includes a commitment to progressing the national goals and targets for children and youth. The achievement of these goals and targets will require health services to shift resources and increase flexibility in service delivery. The following goals and targets affect the primary, secondary and tertiary systems, and require the development of strong intersectoral approaches and partnership with the target group.

The goals and targets which have significance for this plan are: -

  • To reduce premature preventable mortality (including) injury, adolescent suicide, Aboriginal infant mortality and Sudden Infant Death Syndrome;
  • To reduce the impact of disability;
  • To reduce the incidence of vaccine preventable disease;
  • To reduce the impact of conditions occurring in adulthood, but which have their origins or early manifestations in childhood or early adolescence;
  • To enhance family and social functioning by incorporating and quantifying social determinants of health and provide interventions to improve health.

These goals have been identified as service objectives related to the goals, which the Area considers necessary to achieve better health of children in SWS.

NSW has also identified mental health and gender issues as priority areas in the draft NSW Child Health Policy which is to be released shortly for comment.

Since development of an Area Paediatric Plan commenced, the Macarthur planning process commenced. Children were one of the four groups targeted in a needs analysis undertaken in Macarthur as part of this process. This has highlighted a number of issues associated with children in that Sector. These issues will be explored in the Macarthur Health Plan which will be completed in mid 1996.

This plan builds on the considerable effort and consultation which occurred in the development of the Area’s first draft Paediatric Services Strategic Plan. The Plan identifies the major issues affecting the achievement of equity and access and comprehensive paediatric services in SWS. It presents strategies to achieve the goals and targets which have been established to achieve improvement in child health. Developments in inpatient services, community services and the effect of the relocation of Royal Alexandria Hospital for Children to Westmead are also described.

The following key strategic policy directions were identified in The Health of Young Australians:

  • Promotion of healthy supportive environments through appropriate policies, programs and services by all levels of Government;
  • Provision of health services that focus on the needs of consumers and have a commitment to participation of young people and families in decisions about health;
  • Development of a balanced approach between strategies which actively promote good health through environmental and behavioral change, and those which provide care and treatment for ill health;
  • Reduction in inequities in the availability of, and access to, the range of appropriate health services;
  • Greater coordination and collaboration within the health sector and between health and other sectors through the development of cooperative strategies;
  • Regular monitoring of the health of children and young people complemented by research targeting priority areas; and
  • Development of a workforce with the skills and knowledge to work effectively in the maintenance and enhancement of health of young Australians together with increased emphasis on the training needs of people whose work relates to the health of children and young people.

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Last modified: Thursday, 2 September 2004