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Some of the staff were ignoring us because they just didn t want to even talk to us, Aswath Chavittupara told 9News on Thursday.
Western Australia Health Minister Roger Cook said the schoolgirl died of complications related to group A streptococcus and that neither she nor her family received the appropriate level of care the night they attended the hospital. It is associated with very poor health outcomes and high mortality, Cook said, on Wednesday. The report makes it clear that Aishwarya and her parents should have received better care. They did not get the help they asked for.
9News
West Australian Health Minister Roger Cook apologised to the parents of Aishwarya Aswath.
India records world’s highest daily spike in COVID-19 cases
Incoming travellers from high-risk countries will have to return a negative COVID-19 test within 72 hours of arrival
Australia announces 30% reduction in direct flights from India:
“We will be reducing by some 30% the numbers coming through our chartered services in the months ahead. We will also be limiting the departure exceptions for Australians travelling to high-risk countries and the one we re nominating at the moment,” Mr Morrison said.
He said the reduction would apply to both the government-organised repatriation flights and commercial flights into New South Wales. We will also be limiting the departure exceptions for Australians travelling to high-risk countries, he said.
Residents across an 800km stretch of Western Australia have been told to stay at home as Tropical Cyclone Seroja makes landfall on the state's mid west coast.
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An inquiry into the death of a seven-year-old girl at a Perth hospital will examine whether cultural bias or language barriers led to her parents’ pleas for help being ignored.
Seven-year-old Aiswarya Aswath died at Perth Children’s Hospital last Saturday, after she was made to wait two hours to see a doctor.
WA Child and Adolescent Health Services (CAHS), which manages the hospital, is conducting a review of the incident and said it will examine whether the family’s cultural background influenced the care they received.
“All aspects and factors related to a clinical incident will be reviewed, including the cultural and linguistic needs of the family and whether these were related to the clinical incident,” Chief Executive Dr Simon Wood said.