SPEECH NOTES FOR THE PARLIAMENTARY SECRETARY TO THE PREMIER

AS PROXY TO THE MINISTER FOR HEALTH AND AGEING

FIRST DAY OF THE SECOND NATIONAL WORLD ELDER ABUSE AWARENESS CONFERENCE 17-18 June 2013

“BUILDING A NATIONAL APPROACH

TO PREVENT ABUSE OF OLDER AUSTRALIANS”

17 JUNE 2013

09:15– 09:25AM

ADELAIDE CONVENTION CENTRE

NORTH TERRACE, ADELAIDE.

Acknowledgements:

Hon Megan Mitchell National Children’s Commissioner

Brian Butler, Director of National Congress of Australia’s First Peoples

Paul Greenwood, Deputy District Attorney San Diego

Dr John Brayley, Public Advocate SA

Professor Simon Biggs, University of Melbourne

Ian Yates, CEO COTA Australia

Dr Sally Cockburn (pronounced Coerburn) (AKA Dr Feelgood), MC for the event

Judy Cook, Public Advocate Queensland

Mark Crofton, Deputy Public Trustee and Official Solicitor Queensland

State and Territory Governments representatives

Host Ms Marilyn Crabtree, CEO, SA Aged Rights Advocacy Service

Other MPs N/A

Mayors N/A

Other people needing acknowledging Laurie Lewis and Janice Rigney,

Ministerial Advisory Board on Ageing members

Total Registrations approximately 300 delegates

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Thank you Sally, it is my pleasure to be here today. For those of you who don’t know me, my name is Leesa Vlahos and my role is Parliamentary Secretary to our Premier, Jay Weatherill.

I would like to take this opportunity in sharing both Minister Butler’s sentiments in welcoming you all to the Second National Elder Abuse Conference.

Before we start, I gratefully acknowledge this land that we meet on today is the traditional lands for the Kaurna people and that we respect their spiritual relationship with their country. I also acknowledge the Kaurna people as the custodians of the greater Adelaide region and that their cultural and heritage benefits are still as important to the living Kaurna people today.

A little later this morning, the Steve Gadlabardi Goldsmith & Taikurtinna dance group will entertain us… and educate us in the traditional ways of Aboriginal culture, spirituality, and dancing. I am also pleased to advise that we will be addressed by Brian Butler, the Director of National Congress of Australia’s First Peoples. We are most fortunate to have Brian be with us here today.

On behalf of the South Australian Minister for Health and Ageing, the Hon Jack Snelling, I extend a warm welcome to our special guests to Adelaide. He sends you his best wishes for a successful conference and he apologises for being unable to attend.

I am very pleased to welcome the Honourable Megan Mitchell, Australia’s first National Children’s Commissioner. Commissioner Mitchell commenced in her five year position within the Human Rights Commission, on 25 March 2013. She has an extensive list of educational and vocational experience accolades that make her a most suited candidate for implementing changes to improve the lives of children; and; ensuring Australia fulfils her international obligations for protecting the rights of children under the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child.

I am sure you are getting the picture and can appreciate the synergies between protecting the rights of children and older people in supporting the important work that you are all committed to.

I especially welcome Paul Greenwood, Deputy District Attorney San Diego. I understand Paul is a frequent flyer to Australia and I am pleased that he is here to share his extensive prosecutorial experience and what we can learn, as we reflect on our own work here in South Australia.

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I also acknowledge our guests here at “home” in South Australia:

·  Dr John Brayley, South Australian Public Advocate

·  Ian Yates, CEO Council on the Ageing....

·  members of the Ministerial Advisory Board on Ageing, Laurie Lewis and Janice Rigney.

... and our colleagues from interstate including:

·  Professor Simon Biggs from the University of Melbourne, Victoria

·  Judy Cook, Public Advocate Queensland

·  Mark Crofton, Deputy Public Trustee and Official Solicitor Queensland

Lastly, I am sure you have made welcome our master of ceremonies, Dr Sally Cockburn. We are very fortunate, as I am sure most of you would be aware, to have Sally’s capacity as both an entertainer and advocate for the rights of people.

I congratulate Marilyn Crabtree, CEO of Aged Rights Advocacy Service, for organising this event. Marilyn has been advocating for older people and their rights for over twenty five years and for a national elder abuse conference. Many of you would recall the success of the first national conference, convened in Brisbane in 2012.

This year, it’s Adelaide’s turn to host this event. The conference is our opportunity to observe the 2013 World Elder Abuse Awareness Day and discuss some of the best preventing elder abuse practices, frameworks and approaches, both in Australia and overseas.

This year’s conference has a strong emphasis on national approaches, collaboration and investment in systemic strategies that can, and will, effect real changes to the experiences of older people, both now and in the future. I am confident this conference will leave you inspired, informed and wanting to institute more changes locally and nationally.

The national conference comes at a good time for us in South Australia. We have been engaged in new work that I am indeed pleased to be announcing today.

But before I do that, I think it’s important to acknowledge the work of agencies that have actively contributed to abuse prevention and response work in South Australia. Since 1990 many agencies have supported and protected the rights of older people. These include:

·  Aged Rights Advocacy Service

·  Domiciliary Care

·  Office of the Public Advocate

·  Legal Services Commission

·  Guardianship Board

·  South Australian Police

·  Public Trustee and

·  University of South Australia, for their research contributions to evidence base and innovation.

Beyond these agencies, the rights, health and wellbeing of our senior citizens have, for a long time, been at the centre of our thinking and planning.

We have good reason to make older people our priority. In 2011 there were 266,712 people aged over 65 years, approximately 16 per cent of South Australia’s total population. Of these, 36,575 were born in non-English speaking countries, and 30,431 were of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander background.

From 2011 to 2036, the numbers of South Australians aged 65 and older will nearly double to 460,625; of these, those aged 80 and over will more than double from 80,683 to approximately 162,781. By 2036, people aged over 65 years will form approximately 25 per cent of the State’s total population.

As individuals, older South Australians are very diverse. They differ in their health, education, skills, finances and assets, family structures, living arrangements, pre and post-retirement planning, activities, culture, language and spirituality.

Since 2006, the State Government of South Australia has funded numerous kick-start initiatives to address the key themes of safety, security and protection under Improving with Age – Our Ageing Plan for South Australia.

In 2007, we developed a state-wide abuse prevention and response framework - Our Actions to Prevent the Abuse of Older People. This framework guided the implementation of actions by a range of agencies under five main areas:

1.  Providing safety and security – by strengthening reporting mechanisms and accountability

2.  Implementing strategies for prevention – through education and training

3.  Raising awareness – of older people, the community and professionals

4.  Working together – to build strong relationships

5.  Supporting research and innovation – to develop effective prevention models.

Under the Our Actions framework, the South Australian Government has provided over $3.5 million to specific abuse prevention and response activities.

We have listened to the voice of older people – we know what’s important to them and can therefore plan our future priorities around these needs. We know that older people have the right to be safe and to feel secure, within their homes, communities, the relationships they have with others, and when utilising services.

As a state government, our leadership role in the protection of the rights of older people is critical, as are our partnerships with the whole of the community. If we can provide support in the right way, our seniors will stay active and engaged within our communities. With accurate information and choice, older people can remain empowered and independent for as long as possible.

I am pleased to advise that we have been working on developing a new state-wide strategy - the South Australian Strategy for Safeguarding Older People.

This strategy incorporates several key elements that, over the next seven years, will aim to minimise the prevalence and impact of abuse on older people, through implementing:

·  a newly developed South Australian Charter of the Rights and Freedoms of Older People – the first of its kind in Australia

·  Safeguarding Older People - Principles for intervention and

·  Safeguarding Older People – a continuum model for service providers.

The new South Australian Charter articulates the rights of older people that we anticipate will become the conviction of not only service providers, but also the broader community.

Over the next seven years, the Safeguarding continuum will support older people to safeguard their rights and interests through:

·  population based approaches and

·  primary, secondary and tertiary interventions.

This continuum has been designed to provide agencies with a more structured way in how they plan and implement actions to minimise risk factors for older people, from the more independent through to the more vulnerable. It means that, collectively, we can empower older people to self-protect and safeguard their rights and interests, and step up supports and protections where the need arises.

SA Health, through the Office for the Ageing, has coordinated the development of the draft South Australian Strategy for Safeguarding Older People through high level collaboration with key service providers and state government agencies.

This draft Strategy represents the needs of older people, while taking into account the needs agencies. It aims to provide an overarching strategic framework to guide practice and determine actions over the next seven years. It incorporates contemporary international and national approaches, policies, best practice and work already undertaken in South Australia.

Further afield than South Australia, the prevention of abuse of older people is gaining momentum as a significant health and social issue worldwide. Abuse of older people sits under the fourth pillar (security) of the World Health Organisation’s Active Ageing Policy Framework.

Here in South Australia, we have been very fortuitous to have Dr Alexandre Kalache as our Thinker in Residence. He is a world leading ageing expert, past Director of the World Health Organisation and he has integrated his extensive experience in using an age-friendly lens within our own ageing policy context.

Culminating the work over four extensive visits here in South Australia, Dr Alexandre Kalache has now released his Longevity Revolution Report. This report includes numerous recommendations for protecting the rights of older people strongly, as well as other recommendations that, when applied, will universally contribute to strengthening safeguards of older people. We look forward to the synergies between this new strategy and the recommendations proposed by Dr Kalache in his report.

So I am pleased to announce that the draft South Australian Strategy for Safeguarding Older People will be available shortly on the SA Health website for public consultation from late June and over July and we will advise agencies and peak bodies when it is up on the site as we are keen to receive as many comments as possible on this important work.

Once the Strategy is finalised, SA Health Office for the Ageing will coordinate further development of specific actions for implementation over the next seven years to ensure the key outcomes of the strategy are achieved. This will include protocols on the ground to guide the way organisations and services work to assist our older population.

Ageing sector agencies’ views will be sought regarding an implementation plan and a reporting and evaluation framework as part of this process.

I encourage you to actively embrace this strategy’s SA Charter of the Rights and Freedoms of Older People and the safeguarding principles. This strategy will help us achieve our vision for the future - a South Australia where older people are valued and respected, and their rights are safeguarded by the broader community.

Your participation and commitment to this strategy over the next seven years is essential. The safety and wellbeing of older people is a whole of government and community responsibility. Working together, we will strengthen a culture of respect and appreciation, among all generations, where we can empower and ensure older people live positive and fulfilling lives. Together, our actions will help realise this vision and build stronger communities committed to safeguarding older people.

Over the next two days, I encourage you to soak up the atmosphere of this National Elder Abuse Conference. ARAS has pulled together an exciting program that is certain to inspire, guide and challenge you. The only issue, which I am sure most of you will agree with, will be which sessions to attend.

A conference like this achieves a great deal. By everyone being in the same place at the same time, stronger networks are forged and new opportunities unfolded.

Developing a shared vision for national priorities makes for a purposeful national agenda for the prevention of abuse of older people… I dare you to be inspired… to explore new areas, and to return to your respective locations with new ideas as to how to do things differently… and collectively.

It’s time to build a national approach - to address the rights of older people. After two days immersion, delegates will have an opportunity to engage in a panel discussion where, as a nation, the Australian States and Territories can have the necessary dialogue to strengthen our actions around the protection of older people and their rights.

Representatives from State and Territory

Thank you to all who have been involved in preparations to make this event possible. I wish you a stimulating next two days and I look forward to hearing the conference outcomes in the near future.

Thank you

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