The Guardian Australia

ABF 'obstructed' medical transfers from Nauru, Roman Quaedvlieg admits

- Ben Doherty

The former commission­er of the Australian Border Force, Roman Quaedvlieg, has said on Twitter that medical transfers from Nauru were a “vexed” issue for the ABF, which has the ultimate authority to move people to care.

“A lot of [money] has been invested in upgrading medical services there but some cases are so acute they need specialist­s; but we also need to stop exploitati­on of this path.”

He conceded that genuine medical transfers were “obstructed and thwarted” by the ABF.

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A former senior medical officer on Nauru, Dr Nick Martin, told Quaedvlieg: “I appreciate your comments, but you must remember that every time, without fail, that I tried to get deserving cases the care they needed they were thwarted and obstructed by ABF. Every time.”

Quaedvlieg said: “Understood and I accept without equivocati­on. It’s true to say that the threshold for medical repatriati­on to Australia is high; it’s an issue which tormented me as far as I played any role in any case [because] every case was a practical v ethical dilemma. A tragedy borne from tragedy.”

The position of chief medical officer of the Australian Border Force is currently held by a person without medical training.

Previously psychiatri­st Dr John Brayley held the role but since his resignatio­n, the position has been filled by a department bureaucrat.

Quaedvlieg said Brayley was a trusted and respected colleague.

“I took his counsel over lengthy conversati­ons at the oddest hours. It was wise, pragmatic and he had the utmost integrity. He never dictated but always advised and recommende­d.”

Quaedvlieg said that doctors’ advice was not the only considerat­ion in judging whether people should be moved to higher levels of care.

“Medical advice is a primary input but there are many other factors to consider in any case decision, and while it’s never easy, the decision-makers, including me, always did their best for a utilitaria­n outcome.”

The issue of medical transfers out of offshore processing has become one of acute tension between medical practition­ers and the ABF. Patient transfers to higher standards of care are routinely refused or delayed for months, even beyond a year.

Even critically ill patients – such as Hamid Kehazaei or Omid Masoumali – have had their transfers refused or delayed. Both men died.

Three pre-teen children, suffering acute mental illnesses and having made repeated suicide attempts, have been urgently brought to Australia for treatment but only after court actions were launched in Australia to have them moved.

The Nauru hospital is deemed unsafe for surgery by the government’s own health contractor IHMS after a number of deaths.

 ??  ?? The Nauru hospital is considered unsafe for surgery by the Australian government’s own health contractor.
The Nauru hospital is considered unsafe for surgery by the Australian government’s own health contractor.

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