A media release from the Shadow Health Minister for Queensland Jo-Ann Miller:
Shadow Health Minister, Jo-Ann Miller,
says the LNP government has not ruled out cuts to oral health services in
Brisbane as well as cancer services in Toowoomba, Townsville, Hervey Bay, Mount
Isa, Bundaberg and Rockhampton.
“If the LNP government is to stoop as
low as cutting funding for oral health or cancer services it needs to say so
now, and not sneak out the announcement after dark as it usually does with its
bad news,” Mrs Miller said.
“In State Parliament today Health
Minister, Lawrence Springborg, claimed all health services would gain a funding
boost in the State Budget.
“How then does he explain suggestions
that oral health services in the Metro North health region have been told to cut
their budgets and the jobs of three part time dentists will
disappear?
“I am advised that the Metro North
health region’s oral health services have been told to make payroll savings of
$1.75 million to its $30 million budget. That’s a cut of about
6%.
“I also understand that within the
Metro North region management at the Brisbane Dental Hospital have been told to
find labour cost savings of at least $200,000 and possibly up to $550,000 out of
a $6 million.
“Oral health services at Royal
Children’s Hospital including surgery on cleft palates in infants have been
asked to find savings of $100,000 to $150,000.
”How does that all sit with Mr
Springborg’s assertions of funding boosts?”
Mrs Miller said she was also concerned
about information from within Queensland Health about possible cuts to vital
cancer services.
“The Health Minister today attacked
funding arrangements of Commonwealth/State health programs, leaving the door
open to cuts to state funding components,” she said.
“I am told that the LNP is considering
rolling back the state component of the Regional Cancer Centres scheme as part
of the Newman Government’s cuts to frontline services.
“Any cuts to the state government’s
funding of the RCC program is likely to come from scaling back components
covering the operation and equipping of the RCCs.”
Mrs Miller said the federal government
committed more than $164 million over four years for Regional Cancer Centre
capital funding for projects in Toowoomba, Townsville, Hervey Bay, Mount Isa,
Bundaberg and Rockhampton as part of total national funding of $560 million
announced in the 2009-10 Federal Budget. Most of the RCCs in Queensland are in
the final planning or building phase.
The federal funding was to be on top
of the previous state government’s commitment of $105 million over four years
from 2010-11 to staff, equip and operate the RCCs.
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