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The profession calls for humane treatment of asylum seekers

Annette Katelaris and Mark Harris
Med J Aust 2011; 195 (6): 309. || doi: 10.5694/mja11.c0919
Published online: 19 September 2011

Many of us are deeply ashamed of the way Australia treats asylum seekers. Our politicians and media obsess about the way they reach our shores, but, as doctors, our role is to care for them and to advocate for their best interests. We have become increasingly concerned about their wellbeing.

The editorial by Newman and colleagues in this issue supports the investigation by the Commonwealth Ombudsman into suicide and self-harm in Australian immigration detention facilities, and demands action on this crisis (page 310). With more than 1100 incidents of threatened or actual self-harm in these facilities in the past financial year, action is urgently needed. As the authors say, it is well known that the detention environment is harmful, and that time in detention is associated with deteriorating mental and physical health.

Australia resettles about 14 000 refugees annually — only a small proportion of the 15 million worldwide. Asylum seekers represent only 2% of Australia’s annual migration intake, yet immigration detention costs in this financial year will be more than $800 million. Surely this money would be better spent on community integration, education and health care.

Australia is a country that has thrived on immigration, and refugees have made large contributions to our society. Australian medicine has also benefited greatly. Many members of our profession were once refugees, or are the children of refugees. We recently published an inspiring account of a remarkable Rwandan medical student, representative of the latest generation of refugee doctors (MJA 2011; 195 (5): C8).

The Refugee Health Network of Australia (MJA 2011; 195: 185-186) is a national collaboration of over 140 doctors and other health service providers attempting to deliver the health care that refugees so desperately need. Refugees may be unvaccinated, nutritionally deficient, psychologically traumatised and have chronic and infectious diseases. Asylum seekers have all of these problems, but also have great difficulty accessing adequate care because of Medicare ineligibility and poor access to interpreters (MJA 2011; 195: 188-191).

It is our professional responsibility to sometimes speak out on policy issues that affect health. The profession can take some pride in its contribution to many public policies (like those that have helped reduce smoking deaths). Continuing in this tradition, the President of the Australian Medical Association stated at the recent AMA Parliamentary dinner: “The AMA believes the system of mandatory detention of asylum-seekers is inherently harmful to the physical and mental health of detainees . . . we urge both sides of politics to do all that is possible to ensure that these poor people are assured access to quality health care” (http://ama.com.au/node/7061).

The recent Centre for Policy Development report A new approach: breaking the stalemate on refugees and asylum seekers presents a balanced and insightful set of solutions (http://cpd.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/CPD-Refugee_Report_Web.pdf). It calls for a bipartisan approach to ensure that detention centres are used “specifically for health, identity and security checks, with a 30 day time limit for adults and a 14 day time limit for children”. We proudly join our voices to this call, and hope for urgent action to end the physical and mental harm caused by prolonged periods of immigration detention.

  • Annette Katelaris1
  • Mark Harris2

  • akatelaris@mja.com.au


Correspondence: akatelaris@mja.com.au

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