NEWS-HR

The Australian Nursing and Midwifery Federation and Healthscope Pty Ltd have a s.739 (Application to deal with a dispute) before Commissioner Lee in hearing room 8, first floor in Hobart at 2pm.

MSS Strategic Medical & Rescue Pty Ltd has a s.372 (Application to deal with other contravention disputes) with which it must contend (Hall).

Bathurst’s Fire and Rescue NSW (FRNSW) crews were called out to businesses as the freezing temperatures caused pipes to burst. FRNSW Station Officer Sandy Collins said the first call came at 10.27am on Saturday to burst pipes at St Catherine’s Aged Care Facility.

BK Chemists has dished out a (s.394 – application for unfair dismissal remedy) bitter pill to an ex-employee (Trevisan).

SA Health has uncovered at least two more deaths it failed to tell coroner Mark Johns about, admitting there is “more work needed” to ensure doctors meet a legal requirement to report cases. It follows revelations in February that the deaths of eight infants at the Women’s and Children’s Hospital were also not reported to the coroner’s office. Mr Johns had already blasted SA Health for withholding information on two stroke deaths at the Royal Adelaide Hospital.

A nurse who argues traces of cocaine in her body were the result of sex with a “sweaty” user has won a relaxation of an order that she take drug tests. Despite finding Tara Seymour’s excuse “improbable”, the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal agreed to markedly reduce the frequency of her drug testing.

National Prescribing Service is facing a s.372 (Application to deal with other contravention disputes) before Commissioner Johns in his Sydney chambers (McAllan).

About 110 registered Australian nurses and midwives are sub­jected to regular drug and alcohol testing by their national ­regulator. The Nursing and Midwifery Board of Australia said fewer than 0.03% of 367,000 registered members were undergoing the strict, regular testing imposed when the board believes nurses and midwives need to be monitored for the safety of the public. The figures came as the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal relaxed the drug test order imposed on a Melbourne nurse who argued the traces of cocaine in her system were the ­result of sex with a man who was a drug-user.