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Jae Jung and Phiona Stanley Honoured at the FASS Dean's Research Awards

NCHSR - 24 May 2013 - 3:00pm

Congratulations to two of our early career researchers, Jae Jung and Phiona Stanley, who were honoured at the inaugural FASS Dean's Research Awards on Thursday evening at the Sydney Writer's Festival. Professor Les Field, Deputy Vice Chancellor (Research), presented the awards, with Jae winning the prize for the Best Achievements by an Early Career Researcher (shared jointly with Abigail Powell from the Social Policy Research Centre) and Phiona was runner up in the award for Best Monograph by an Early Career Researcher. Well done - we are so proud of you!

WHO paper highlights transgender issues in Asia and the Pacific

AFAO - 23 May 2013 - 5:00pm
The World Health Organization has published a Technical Brief outlining the health needs of transgender people in Asia and the Pacific, focusing on the epidemiology of HIV and other sexually transmitted infections (STIs).

The MSMGF Launches New Online Advocacy Resource

AFAO - 22 May 2013 - 5:00pm
The Global Forum on MSM & HIV (MSMGF) has launched a new website to support the Speaking Out Toolkit for MSM-Led HIV and AIDS Advocacy.

Zombie Prom

ACON - 21 May 2013 - 5:47pm

It’s time to get your ghoul on and rise from your graves as Zombie Prom is coming!

It’s time to get your ghoul on and rise from your graves as Zombie Prom is coming!

At Zombie Prom we’ll all be taught to shuffle, limp, haemorrhage and moan our way through a group choreographed zombie dance. 

After dance rehearsal stick around and get 6 feet down on the haunted dance floor.

 

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Lismore And Byron To Share The Love

ACON - 21 May 2013 - 5:15pm

ACON's LOVE Project will be holding two discussion groups in the Northern Rivers region - one in Byron and one in Lismore. Do you wonder what you will do as you age, where you will live, whether your partner can live with you, how those around may respond...? If you're over 50 and interested in the ageing needs of yourself and others in the LGBTI community, come and inform us about your experiences, service preferences and how you think things can change.

Show External link:  http://www.acon.org.au/ageing/loveproject#workshops

Why Islam matters in prevention efforts for HIV

AFAO - 20 May 2013 - 5:00pm
A new discussion paper examines why Islam matters in prevention efforts for HIV in the Asia-Pacific.

Accenture Australia Tops List of LGBTI-Friendly Aussie Employers

ACON - 20 May 2013 - 11:29am

Accenture Australia has been named Australia’s Employer of the Year for 2013 at a special event recognising workplace support for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex (LGBTI) people.

PID Patron Michael Kirby, Accenture's Ashley Anderson-Buick, AFL anti-homophobia campaigner Jason Ball, Accenture's Angela Walsh, and awards MC Bob Downe

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Reliance on 457 visas blunts the vision of the NDIS

NCHSR - 17 May 2013 - 3:00pm

 

With the legislation now through both houses of parliament, The National Disability Insurance Scheme, or DisabilityCare, is law, and will quickly become a defining feature of Australia’s social policy landscape. Gillard’s Medicare-style tax levy, now locked in through the federal budget, will ensure a reliable flow of funds to the Scheme, and with the prospect of sustainable federal funding on the table, most states and territories have signed up for the national roll-out, and agreed to foot a share of the bill.

But with only weeks left before its launch, closer consideration of the detail of DisabilityCare, including how the organisations providing disability services, and their paid employees will cope, is well overdue.

For many years, demand for formal support services has been growing, and providers have struggled to properly resource their responses. De-institutionalisation since the 1980s has seen more people with severe or profound limitations living in the community, and in coming decades, the number of people aged under 65 with core activity limitations will continue to grow. In 2011, services funded under the National Disability Agreement were assisting one in 71 people, compared with one in 94 people in 2006.

In response, the number of workers who provide care and support for people with disabilities is also growing. Between 2012 and 2017, growth in the number of aged and disability carers is expected to be about 24%, even before the NDIS rolls out nationally, while the full rollout is expected to require the disability workforce to double. At the same time, the age structure of the paid care workforce means many workers will retire in the next decade.

In this context, it is no surprise that a large employer is pleading to meet the industry’s growth needs with temporary overseas workers. This avenue is already available for skilled positions such as nursing, special education, and social work, as well as some mid-skill welfare occupations. The use of temporary visas to ensure sufficient supply of lower skill personal carers seems a short-sighted and ill-suited response to real problems of long-term under-investment in the sectors greatest asset: its frontline workforce.

First, the “457 solution” is poorly aligned with the NDIS' vision of promoting the capacity of consumers to choose their own support staff, and in some cases to employ them directly, because 457 visaholders can only be employed by organisations, not by individuals.

Second, a temporary workforce is less than ideal for people with disabilities and their families. Support is labour intensive, and the personal element of the work means the security and consistency of sustained relationships is the key to quality, as these give the foundation for fostering capabilities, wellbeing and participation of people with disability, and promoting NDIS goals of choice and empowerment.

Third, the nature of disability support work means temporary migrants may be exposed to levels of exploitation over and above that already experienced by the domestic workforce. While staff working in the homes of people with disabilities are vulnerable to isolation, a lack of collegial support and poor union representation, those on 457 visas will face additional barriers in raising concerns over pay, conditions and health and safety, because their visa and residency (as well as employment) depends on employers. The limited capacity of the Department of Immigration and Citizenship to monitor employers’ compliance is well known.

Addressing workforce shortages with a temporary overseas workforce would leave intact the underlying structural workforce problems, and risk exacerbating the vulnerability to low pay, insecurity, and under-skilling of this female dominated workforce.

In 2010, more than a third of non-professional disability workers in the non-government sector were casual, and more than half of employers reported their non-professional employees were under-skilled.

Upskilling is far from straightforward, as under the NDIS, it is unlikely that qualifications will be mandatory. FAHCSIA’s portfolio budget statements indicate a commitment to exploring the Scheme’s workforce implications, with DisabilityCare Australia charged with developing a Workforce Plan. However, it remains unclear whether and how the training required will be paid for or delivered, and whether the cash payments allocated to consumers to direct to their preferred mix of supports will be sufficient to pay decent wages and to backfill while support workers up-skill. Our co-authored research underlines how individual funding models can result in financial uncertainty for organisations, and can raise challenges for planning a co-ordinated industry agenda to address recruitment and training needs.

Structural problems of low pay, low status, poor working conditions, and poor access to opportunities for skill development act as disincentives for workers to remain in the disability industry. A strategic, national and collaborative approach to addressing these will be necessary if the high expectations of the NDIS are to be met.

As demonstrated in recent postings on the federal government’s “Your Say” forum for the NDIS, service users and their families take these problems seriously, frequently pointing to problems of unreliable, inconsistent support, and high turnover.

From July 1, experiences in the NDIS launch sites will be closely scrutinised. As others have pointed out, there will inevitably be glitches with an initiative of this scale, and with this level of ambition.

If the NDIS is to deliver on its promise of sector expansion and choice for consumers, problems of workforce shortages, and associated issues of low pay, insecurity, low status, and under-investment in skill development, must be properly addressed. We need look only as far as the recent deals between the federal government, employers and unions in early childhood and aged care to see the value of a more co-ordinated, long-term approach.

Natasha Cortis has conducted commissioned research on issues in community services, and the community services workforce, for State and Federal Governments, and non-government organisations. However, this piece has not been funded by any agency.

Sharni has conducted commissioned research on issues in community services, and the community services workforce, for State and Federal Governments, and non-government organisations. However, this piece has not been funded by any agency.

This article was originally published at The Conversation. Read the original article.

QS World Rankings of Education: UNSW No. 19 in the world

NCHSR - 17 May 2013 - 3:00pm

The 2013 QS World University Ranking for Education have just been released, and are available in full from the QS website. This was the second year Education as a discipline has been ranked, using data derived from large-scale academic (70,000) and employer reputation surveys, and Scopus data relating to citations per faculty staff member. These were combined to produce the subject results. The evaluation included more than 2,000 universities around the world, and over 700 institutions were ranked. UNSW jumped from 30th to 19th in the very competitive ranking of the best universities in the world to study education. A particularly pleasing result was that we achieved the highest employer approval rating of any Australian institution of education, with a score of 95.6, the sixth highest score in the world, just behind University of Hong Kong (95.8), Harvard (97.4), Oxford (98.6) and Cambridge (100). We also scored well on academic reputation, although not surprisingly, given the very young average age of our staff, relatively lower on citations and H-Index. This is an amazing result for such a small School and bodes well for our future development. Congratulations to all !

The Social Presents: Barefoot Bowls at Erskineville

ACON - 15 May 2013 - 4:42pm

ACON, Positive Life NSW and The Institute of Men (TIM) are holding the next Social event for Gay Men Living with HIV - Barefoot bowls at Erskineville.

 

ACON, Positive Life NSW and The Institute of Men (TIM) are holding the next Social event for Gay Men Living with HIV - Barefoot bowls @ Erskineville.

Join us at the Alexandria-Erskineville Bowling Club for a relaxed afternoon of barefoot bowls.

Throw on your bowling whites, grab your balls, grab some tucker and a bevvie and hit the greens! Catch up with some old mates and meet some new ones.
No RSVP needed.

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ACON Welcomes Move To Legalise Cannabis For Limited Medical Use In NSW

ACON - 15 May 2013 - 3:01pm

ACON has welcomed a recommendation from a NSW parliamentary committee to allow medical use of cannabis for people with terminal illness and AIDS.

ACON has welcomed a recommendation from a NSW parliamentary committee to allow medical use of cannabis for people with terminal illness and AIDS.

The recommendation was announced today in a report from the NSW Legislative Council Select Committee inquiry into the use of cannabis for medical purposes.

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Gay Men Focus Groups

ACON - 15 May 2013 - 12:23pm

ACON is conducting important social and educational research about gay men in May.

ACON is conducting important social and educational research about gay men in May.

Gay men aged over 18 years old, either HIV positive or HIV negative, are invited to attend group discussions.

Participants will receive a $50 gift voucher for their time.

Each session will run for approximately 60 minutes.

If you would like to be involved please sign up using the form below.

 

What,where,when?

What:    Gay Men Focus Groups

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HIV Clinical Trials update