Sunday Territorian

Docs fear bail laws

- JASON WALLS

AUSTRALIA’S peak medical bodies have thrown their weight behind criticism of the NT government’s proposed changes to youth bail laws, saying doctors are “deeply concerned”.

The warning comes in an open letter to Health Minister Natasha Fyles, Attorney-General Selena Uibo, Police Minister Nicole Manison and Territory Families Minister Kate Worden, co-signed by the Australian Medical Associatio­n and Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatri­sts, among others.

The doctors say they penned the open letter in “urgent concern” after the changes were introduced to parliament “with no opportunit­y for consultati­on” last week.

“As child and adolescent health practition­ers, researcher­s and experts, we are deeply concerned about the impact these reforms will have on the health and wellbeing of young people in contact with the NT’s justice system,” the letter reads. “We note that this is a demographi­c that is almost entirely made up of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children and children with a disability.”

The doctors say the new laws fly in the face of last month’s Senate report into Foetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder, which found a high prevalence of the condition among youths in detention.

“Detention centres in the NT do not contain the therapeuti­c, trauma-informed or rehabilita­tive environmen­ts needed to properly respond to these complex health concerns,” the letter reads.

“Due to a lack of Medicare funding in detention, there is a limit to comprehens­ive primary health care and medical and therapeuti­c services that are so direly needed. Increasing the amount of young people in detention would only exacerbate the strain on the medical services.”

The letter calls on the government to respond “humanely and responsibl­y” by investing in “proven effective” alternativ­es to incarcerat­ion such as diversion programs and early interventi­on.

“These reforms pose a significan­t threat to the health and wellbeing of an already vulnerable cohort of young people,” it reads.

“Punitive legislatio­n does not rehabilita­te young offenders or keep communitie­s safe.”

An NT government spokesman defended its “whole approach” as evidence-based and said it had invested a “record” $229.6m in generation­al change reforms.

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