The Guardian Australia

Australia would have its own centre for disease control under a Labor government

- Katharine Murphy

Labor will use the opening of budget week to commit to establishi­ng an Australian Centre for Disease Control, saying a dedicated body could have avoided some of the underprepa­ration that was evident at the beginning of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The Australian Medical Associatio­n earlier this year urged the Morrison government to set up an Australian national centre for disease control to provide independen­t advice to government­s about the management of pandemics, and ensure a national stockpile of essential equipment was in place for the next crisis.

The AMA’s then president, Tony Bartone, made the pitch, backed by the Australian Nursing and Midwifery Federation (ANMF), during an appearance at the Senate inquiry into the government’s management of the Covid-19 crisis in late June, noting he was aware of some resistance within government to creating a new health bureaucrac­y.

A parliament­ary inquiry in 2013 called for an independen­t review to assess the feasibilit­y of a national CDC. But the Coalition rejected that recommenda­tion in a response to the inquiry five years later.

Opposition leader Anthony Albanese will confirm on Tuesday Labor will establish a CDC if it wins the next federal election. Albanese will argue the coronaviru­s pandemic has made the case why pandemic preparatio­ns need to improve.

Under the Labor proposal, which was briefed to reporters without a costing attached to the measure, an Australian CDC would have capacity to monitor current and emerging threats and work with state government­s and medical service providers to improve surge readiness in both health and aged care settings.

As well as working to combat the spread of infectious diseases, the CDC would also work on strategies to prevent chronic illnesses.

The CDC would manage the national medical stockpile and run preparedne­ss drills. It would also collaborat­e with other countries on responses to a pandemic threat.

With MPs back in Canberra ahead of Tuesday’s budget and the resumption of parliament, Albanese told the Labor caucus budget week marked a shift in strategy for the opposition.

He said Labor had been constructi­ve as the Morrison government faced up to the challenges associated with the coronaviru­s pandemic, but it was now time for Labor to start laying out a more detailed alternativ­e given voters could be going to the polls next year.

In relation to the CDC commitment, Albanese said Australia was the only country in the OECD not to have a CDCequival­ent, and there had not been a pandemic drill at the national level for 12 years.

“Ask any Australian and they’ll tell you our response to the coronaviru­s pandemic was too slow, too reactive and too uncoordina­ted,” the Labor leader said in a statement.

“We can’t be left playing catch up again – we cannot afford another Ruby Princess, or another tragic disaster in aged care,” he said. “Our health, our lives and our economy all depend on us getting our response to future pandemics right.”

Albanese says he would work with state government­s on the design of the body.

The AMA has made it clear a CDC should be its own entity rather than part of the apparatus of government. In backing an Australian CDC earlier this year, Bartone said it was imperative that a CDC work “frankly, fearlessly and independen­tly of government­s of the day” and be in a position to collaborat­e with all the public health expertise in the community.

There has been some concern in the health and medical communitie­s that the current pandemic advisory body, the Australian Health Protection Principal Committee, has been absorbed during the crisis as a sub-committee of the national cabinet.

The CDC model envisaged by Labor would not have statutory independen­ce but it would be similar to the Therapeuti­c Goods Administra­tion, an advisory body that sits within the federal health portfolio.

Like the TGA, it would provide independen­t advice and government­s would make their own decisions informed by that advice.

 ??  ?? Labor party leader Anthony Albanese says the coronaviru­s has shown Australia needs to improve its pandemic preparatio­ns and establish a national CDC. Photograph: Dean Lewins/AAP
Labor party leader Anthony Albanese says the coronaviru­s has shown Australia needs to improve its pandemic preparatio­ns and establish a national CDC. Photograph: Dean Lewins/AAP

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