JOINT MEDIA RELEASE
Aotearoa New Zealand
Association of Social Workers
DHB Social Work Leaders
Council
For release – Tuesday 7 April 2009
Social
Workers support World Health Day’s emphasis on disaster
preparedness
The importance of having well trained
and highly competent teams of health workers, including
social workers, to respond to emergencies should never be
overlooked, say New Zealand’s professional body for social
workers, the Aotearoa New Zealand Association of Social
Workers (ANZASW) and the District Health Board Social Work
Leaders Council.
In a joint statement, ANZASW President Rose Henderson and Marianne Pike, Chair of the DHB Social Work Leaders Council, have supported the disaster preparedness theme for this year’s World Health Day and its slogan: ‘Save lives. Make hospitals safe in emergencies’.
“Given that New Zealand has a high risk of major disasters such as earthquakes the safety of the health infrastructure of our hospitals should never be taken for granted,” said Marianne Pike, who works at Taranaki District Health Board.
“The message for World Health Day this year is that we need to keep investing in that infrastructure, and that we equally need to protect and train health workers to handle emergencies. Without both the physical and human infrastructure and the multidisciplinary health teams we have in New Zealand it would be impossible to withstand hazards and serve people in immediate need”, she added.
Rose Henderson of ANZASW said the emergency response to the bushfire disaster in Australia earlier this year illustrated the role that social workers can play in meeting the needs of people over and above their medical needs. “The experience in Australia is one we need to learn from; it demonstrated the importance of mobilising a coordinated response”.
Later this year ANZASW will be bringing Dr Michael Cronin, a world-renowned social work expert in disaster responses, to a conference in Auckland. “Michael represents the International Federation of Social Workers at the United Nations in New York. He has expert knowledge about international social work and disaster preparedness which he will be sharing with us at the Asia Pacific Social Work Conference in November,” said Rose Henderson.
World Health Day is the anniversary of the foundation of the World Health Organisation (WHO), which celebrated its 60th anniversary in 2008. Some of the examples being used by WHO to illustrate this year’s theme for World Health Day include the devastation caused by flooding in Haiti, the importance of infection control measures and the environmental risks associated with temperature extremes, such as the heatwave which struck Europe in 2003 and which impacted heavily on France’s health sector (this resulted in systems to give public authorities a three-day warning of a likely heatwave so steps can be taken under a national heatwave plan).
For
more information on World Health Day visit
www.who.int
For more information about the Asia Pacific
Social Work Conference visit www.swinnz2009.co.nz
ends