NEWS-HR

A prominent male doctor has been identified as one of two people killed inside a Rockhampton house on Monday night. The bodies of anaesthetist Dr Andrew Carll and an unidentified woman were found by police in the main bedroom of a house on Frenchville Road about 9:30pm when officers responded to a triple-0 call. Police declared the site a crime scene and are treating the deaths as suspicious.

The lawyer for a celebrity psychologist and former scoutmaster charged over historic child sex offences says his client is “in a state of shock” and “quite depressed” after being charged. NSW Police allege Bob Montgomery sexually assaulted three 12-year-old boys in the 1960s while he was a scoutmaster in Sydney’s east and inner west. The prominent psychologist appeared on Channel 10’s television program Big Brother as a guest consultant and as an expert on ABC radio programs.

North and West Remote Health Limited & Warren and Another face a s.365 (Application to deal with contraventions involving dismissal) before Fair Work Deputy President Boyce in his Brisbane chambers (Bewsher).

A s.185 (Application for approval of a single-enterprise agreement) from Orana Incorporated Limited for its Orana Australia Limited and United Voice Enterprise Agreement 2018 has been granted by Fair Work Commissioner Platt in Adelaide on 31 January 2019.

Life Without Barriers is set to defend a s.394 (Application for unfair dismissal remedy) in front of Fair Work Deputy President Beaumont in Hearing Room 12.05 in Perth (Sharkey).

A young real estate agent was pushing hard to sell an apartment to an old codger. After highlighting its many features, he ended his hard sell with, “Remember, Mr Brown, this is an investment for the future.” “Listen, young man” said Mr Brown. “At my stage of life, I don’t even buy green bananas.”

A group of egotistical TV personalities visit a senior citizens’ home when one casually sits beside a resident and asks expectantly: “Do you know who I am?” “No” comes the reply. “But if you go to the front office I’m sure they will tell you.”

An experienced Adelaide nurse has been banned from practising for nine months for giving a dangerous drug to the wrong patient and trying to cover it up. Ms Newblack admitted to the tribunal that she wrongfully administered intravenous morphine to the wrong patient on September 13, 2015. She also admitted she failed to report the wrongful administration, falsified records, encouraged two other staff members to stay silent and gave a false or misleading explanation to the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency. Ms Newblack told the tribunal that she had been dealing with a family crisis and agreed to look after the patients of another nurse, who was going on a tea break. One of her new tasks was to administer morphine to the patient, referred to as “BZ”, in cubicle 33. “(Ms Newblack) went alone into cubicle 36 and not cubicle 33. She did not check the patient’s name to ensure that she was dealing with patient BZ,” the tribunal stated. “This was in breach of the medical administration policy of SA Health as applied by Flinders Medical Centre — the policy requires two qualified nurses to be present at the time of administration.