|  |  | 
         
           | Overview | 
         
           | 7.1 | In general, living in a rural or remote area  translates to limited access to medical and health professional facilities. Women  may not have any choice about how they can deliver their baby, they will have  to travel large distances and when they return home and they are unlikely to  have services nearby which can help them with breastfeeding. In remote areas,  these problems can be even more severe. | 
         
           | 7.2 | Women in rural and remote communities where  there is a high level of breastfeeding support such as supportive health staff,  a volunteer breastfeeding counsellor or an International Board Certified Lactation  Consultant (IBCLC) can find breastfeeding highly successful. Community  acceptance, family support and community expectations are relevant in any  community and breastfeeding rates are likely to rise according to people's  knowledge, expectations and acceptance of what is a normal process.1 | 
         
           | 7.3 | The  health status of the disadvantaged, Indigenous and remote communities within Australia is known to be of a lower standard than the  general population. For example, Indigenous Australians have a life expectancy  15 to 20 years shorter, and higher incidences of all chronic illnesses such as  diabetes, heart disease, kidney disease and acute chest infections.2 The  committee considers that breastfeeding needs to be promoted within Indigenous  Australian communities as a preventative health measure and that support should  be provided to enable successful breastfeeding.   | 
         
           | 7.4 | Many of  the issues and actions required in relation to the provision of health services  in regional, remote and Indigenous communities were beyond the scope of the  evidence that the committee received as part of this inquiry. However, the  committee acknowledges there is a real need for breastfeeding support services  in these communities and adds its voice to that of a mother from regional Australia, Rebecca Ferluga: acknowledge that there  is a lack of support which must be impacting on breastfeeding rates in rural  communities; that there is not a 'one-size-fits-all solution' across city and  country; and that we need specific solutions and increased Government support  to fill the gaps so rural mums and babies don't miss out on the professional  and community breastfeeding support they need.3 | 
         
           |  |  | 
         
           | Factors influencing breastfeeding | 
         
           | 7.5 | Women in regional and remote communities do not  have the same level of breastfeeding support available as women in urban areas.  Factors such as distance, lack of health care options, isolation and lack of  community breastfeeding support services all have an impact on breastfeeding. Additionally,  the factors which impact on the initiation and duration of breastfeeding may  vary slightly between rural and urban populations (see Table 7.1). Younger mothers  were more likely to breastfeed if they were in a rural area compared to an  urban area; however, younger mothers in general were also more likely to cease  breastfeeding no matter whether they were in a rural or urban environment. In  rural areas the influence of the maternal grandmother was not as strong,  compared to urban areas.
            | 
         
           | Table 7.1 Factors associated with the initiation  and duration of breastfeeding in a rural population compared with an urban  population. 
               
                 | Factors associated with    the decision to breastfeed | Factors associated with risk of    ceasing breastfeeding |  
                 | In a Rural area,    breast feeding was more likely if:  | In a Rural area    risk of early cessation of breastfeeding was higher:  |  
                 | ● fathers    preferred breastfeeding;● mothers were    younger;
 ● mothers decided    pre-pregnancy to breastfeed;
 ● mothers were    primiparous (first pregnancy).
 | ● in younger    mothers;● in mothers who    planned to breastfeed for less than two months;
 ● where fathers did    not prefer breastfeeding;
 ● in mothers who    did not decide to breastfeed before becoming pregnant;
 ● in mothers    whose infants received complementary formula feeds in hospital.
 |  
                 | In an Urban area,    breast feeding was more likely if:  | In an Urban area,    risk of early cessation of breastfeeding was higher:  |  
                 | ● fathers    preferred breastfeeding;● maternal    grandmothers preferred breastfeeding;
 ● mothers decided    pre-pregnancy to breastfeed;
 ● mothers were    primiparous;
 ● mothers were    born in Australia, the United Kingdom, Asia, the Middle East or North Africa;
 ● husbands were    professional or administrators.
 | ● in younger    mothers;● in less    educated mothers;
 ● in mothers born    in Australia, New Zealand or the United Kingdom compared with mothers born in the Middle East or Africa;
 ● in mothers who    planned to breastfeed for less than four months;
 ● when maternal    grandmothers were ambivalent or preferred formula feeding;
 ● when mothers    received conflicting advice on infant feeding while in hospital.
 |  Source: National Health & Medical Research Council, Dietary Guidelines for Children and Adolescents  in Australia, (2003), p 9 | 
         
           |  |  | 
         
           | Regional and remote communities | 
         
           | 7.6 | The Australian Rural Nurses and Midwives argues  that the social fabric of rural communities has changed. They consider there  has been a change from the extended family networks previously seen, leading to  people becoming socially isolated. If family support is not available and if it  cannot be supplemented with professional support then these communities face a  double disadvantage.4 Parents may have  limited support from family and friends if they have recently moved to a rural  area for work or lifestyle reasons. Parents are likely to have to travel  further for both specialist and essential health services (especially those that  reside on outlying agricultural properties). Additional demands may be present  including lack of financial security (for example the impact of drought and  industry deregulation on some primary producers) and commitments to livestock  (i.e. poses problems for travelling where others are not available to monitor  stock).5 | 
         
           | 7.7 | Bush nursing communities still operate in some  areas in Victoria;  however, there is a trend for services in rural and remote areas to be cut back  with staff doing less travel out to those remote areas. There is an expectation that rural people will  travel in to the services, which can mean that some people become quite  isolated, if they do not have the means to enable them to travel.6 Breastfeeding problems, such as mastitis,  that could be treated quickly and effectively if a service was close, can often  escalate with a time delay in treatment, a travel component and associated  expense.  A woman from our community could have to travel over 200km round  trip to access ultrasound – after referral from her GP (if there is a GP in her  town!!) whilst suffering from debilitating infection accompanied by fever, rigors,  exhaustion and at least one very unhappy baby. This is very emotionally  distressing and would required a very strong constitution not to "give  up" breastfeeding and use artificial formulas.7 | 
         
           | 7.8 | Rural towns are not always seen as being  ‘breastfeeding friendly’ by mothers. In a breastfeeding study in rural South    Australia, 92 per cent of breastfeeding mothers in  the study stated that breastfeeding was not well supported within the  community. There are excellent places available in Adelaide  but all my breastfeeding friends agree, it's impossible, facilities in  [regional town] are practically non-existent.8 | 
         
           |  |  | 
         
           | Staff workforce and workplace issues | 
         
           | 7.9 | Staff workforce issues are a major factor in the  provision of services in the medical and allied health areas in rural and  remote areas. The Australian Rural Nurses and Midwives noted that there are  difficulties in the recruitment and retention of midwives to rural and remote  areas. A particular issue is ensuring midwives have access to continuing  education and professional development. This is often difficult, primarily due  to the lack of available staff to backfill core staff.9 Additionally, it can be difficult to gain  access to a wide enough variety of experiences because midwives are not able to  practise across their scope of practice. | 
         
           | 7.10 | For childbearing women in rural Australia the  provision of maternity services continues to be hampered by shortages of GP  obstetricians and midwives and closures of smaller maternity  units with 130 units having closed in the past ten years.  This is despite recent studies showing that birthing in small, rural Australian  maternity units is not associated with adverse outcomes for low risk women or  their newborn babies.10 | 
         
           | 7.11 | Continuity of care in rural and remote areas is  not always available (see chapter 6). Many  women do not have the option of giving birth in their local community hospital  as obstetric services have been centralised in major centres. This results in  some mothers being discharged back in to their local community, away from the  health service staff with whom they may have developed rapport through their  involvement with the birth and in the initial stages of feeding, and often  before breastfeeding is established.11 | 
         
           |  |  | 
         
           | Advice | 
         
           | 7.12 | People who live in more remote areas may not have  any choice in the health services they can access. If they are having problems  or need some advice on a breastfeeding issue, they may only have one place  where they can access help or advice. It can be quite difficult and expensive  to seek a second opinion, so they may simply follow the advice given. If this  advice is to supplement or change to infant formula, they may not be advised of  the effect upon their milk supply and premature weaning may be the unintended result. | 
         
           | 7.13 | Even quite straightforward solutions such as the  Australian Breastfeeding Association’s helpline can become more complex and  expensive in rural and remote areas. It may require two STD phone calls to  reach a counsellor and then with the call being timed, it becomes expensive.12 | 
         
           |  |  | 
         
           | Indigenous health status | 
         
           | 7.14 | The  origins of poor health for Indigenous people can in part be traced to early  life. Poor nutrition during pregnancy and childhood is a determinant of poor  health and social outcomes in adulthood, including chronic disease, poor school  attendance and reduced learning. Low birth weight, growth failure and iron  deficiency are indicators of poor nutritional status which have shown little  improvement over the past decade. According to the National Aboriginal and  Torres Strait Islander Nutrition Strategy and Action Plan (NATSINSAP) they are  a salient reminder of the increasing health disparity between Aboriginal and  non-Aboriginal populations.13 | 
         
           | 7.15 | The  poor health status of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people indicates  that they are the most disadvantaged population group in Australia14 and the committee was particularly  interested in gaining more information on the rates of breastfeeding amongst  the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people. | 
         
           |  |  | 
         
           | Breastfeeding rates in Indigenous  populations | 
         
           | 7.16 | The  latest Indigenous breastfeeding statistics were obtained in the 2004-05  National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Survey. It found that the  majority of Indigenous women, 84 per cent, aged 18-64 years who had had  children reported having breastfed them. This rate was higher in remote areas, (92  per cent) than non-remote areas (80 per cent).15 Traditionally,  breastfeeding babies was normal practice for Indigenous women and breastfeeding  was thought to continue until the child reached several years of age. Breastfeeding  has been a normal part of Aboriginal culture and mature Aboriginal women living  in remote and rural parts of Australia tend to follow more traditional  lifestyles and breastfeed more often and for longer.16 | 
         
           | 7.17 | Breastfeeding  rates in Indigenous populations are likely to vary depending on rural, remote  or urban setting. The South Australian Government noted that studies conducted  in several different states of Australia have shown breastfeeding prevalence by  Aboriginal women decreases by increasing proximity to urban areas and is  similar to that for women of low socio-economic background.17 | 
         
           | 7.18 | The  Northern Territory Government noted that a small number of studies have been  conducted to measure current breastfeeding rates in Indigenous populations.  However, like many current studies, comparison of data is difficult due to  variations in breastfeeding definitions and sampling methods. Anecdotal evidence  suggests that the rate of breastfeeding amongst Indigenous women in the Northern Territory may be decreasing.18 | 
         
           | 7.19 | The  committee considers that any significant improvement in the rates of  breastfeeding in Indigenous communities will require at the very least, the  collection of Indigenous breastfeeding data as part of a national monitoring  system.  This will enable an accurate measure  of the current state of breastfeeding in Indigenous communities and allow for  the development of appropriate breastfeeding promotion and support.  | 
         
           | 7.20 | Recommendation 20
              That the Department of Health and Ageing provide leadership in the area of  monitoring, surveillance and evaluation of breastfeeding rates and practices in  Indigenous populations in both remote and other areas. 
 | 
         
           |  |  | 
         
           | The critical importance of breastfeeding | 
         
           | 7.21 | The  protection of breastfeeding is one health promotion activity that has potential  for short and long-term improvements in Indigenous health. Breastfeeding should be encouraged, promoted  and supported in Indigenous populations as it will result in substantial  benefits to the health care system.19 | 
         
           | 7.22 | Indigenous communities are already marginalised  in terms of health status, and breastfeeding is one way to ensure that health  benefits are passed onto children. For  example, rates of recurrent otitis media in Aboriginal children are ten times  higher than in the general population as the NSW Centre for Population Health  Nutrition indicates.20 Recurrent otitis media leads to hearing  problems in children which can lead to learning difficulties - perpetuating a  cycle of disadvantage. The evidence that breastfeeding provides protection  against otitis media is very strong (see chapter 3). For this reason alone  breastfeeding should be encouraged in Indigenous populations.  | 
         
           |  |  | 
         
           | Barriers  to breastfeeding
 | 
         
           | 7.23 | The Australian Rural Nurses and Midwives  indicated that two of the main barriers to breastfeeding are the lack of  support services in remote communities and the breakdown of the social structure.  Where breastfeeding would have been traditionally modelled and supported by the  community, social breakdown in remote Indigenous communities means that  breastfeeding is less prevalent and less supported.21 
 That is an issue that was raised with the women yesterday. They  talked about the impact of not having mothers-of mothers either dying or being  from the stolen generation-and how that has affected them. They talked about  the lack of support that they have had and how they have looked to the  community for support.22 | 
         
           | 7.24 | As  noted in chapter 5, the length of postnatal hospital stay has significantly  decreased over the last decade in Australia, despite evidence to  support links between quality postnatal care and sustained breastfeeding. The  NSW Aboriginal Maternal and Infant Health Strategy (AMIHS) considers that discharging  women home early does not have to be an issue if there is effective, sustained  home visiting by qualified health professionals and family support for the  woman. The barriers to breastfeeding for Indigenous women are similar to non  Indigenous women; 23 however, the difficulties  can be magnified if Indigenous women do not have a supportive environment.24 | 
         
           |  |  | 
         
           | The marketing of infant formula | 
         
           | 7.25 | On its visits to two remote Indigenous  communities in Queensland, the  committee saw no evidence of direct marketing of infant formula; however, the  committee acknowledges this was not a representative sample of communities in Australia.  | 
         
           | 7.26 | The community store in Pormpuraaw, which is the  main provider of formula, stocks three brands and sells an average of two tins  of each brand every month for a population of 700 people in the town of Pormpuraaw  and the 12 Homelands Outstations. Feedback  generated during the 2005 Northern Territory infant feeding guidelines project,  however, indicated that the use of infant formula in remote communities was becoming  more common, particularly amongst young mothers.25  | 
         
           | 7.27 | Formula was more expensive in remote communities  than urban environments; however, the cost of infant formula did not seem to be  a barrier to its use. For people on lower incomes, infant formulas are very  expensive but whilst it may seem to equate to the fact that breastfeeding is an  attractive option in lower socioeconomic groups, it is not always the reality  according to the Australian Rural Nurses and Midwives.26 Queensland Health noted that in  Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities, correct information  regarding breast milk substitutes should be provided to families as misinformation  can accompany the marketing, making the promotion of these products highly  successful and commonly used.27 | 
         
           | 7.28 | Additionally  anecdotal evidence from health practitioners in Queensland and the Northern  Territory suggests the regular use of alternate products to infant formula in  Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities. This includes cow's milk,  reconstituted powdered milk and soft drink via infant bottles in infants less  than 12 months of age and highlights the need for additional strategies to  promote breastfeeding.28 Evidence indicates that Indigenous mothers  are also more likely to introduce unmodified cow's milk before 12 months of age  than non-Indigenous mothers.29 | 
         
           |  |  | 
         
           | Education | 
         
           | 7.29 | The NSW  Aboriginal Maternal and Infant Health Strategy (AMIHS) considers there is a  need for further antenatal education for mothers and their support network. Some  women are unable to breastfeed due to pressure from families and males who do  not understand the benefits for mother and baby.30 Education and support  is also required from other members of the health care team including General  Practitioners. GP's find it easy to switch to bottles as everyone knows what  they are getting. Many women are unaware of implications of bottle feeding and  partners are unsupportive due to perceived 'ownership' of woman's body.31 | 
         
           |  |  | 
         
           | Cultural factors | 
         
           | 7.30 | The NSW  Aboriginal Maternal and Infant Health Strategy (AMIHS) Training and Support  Unit (TSU) noted that Aboriginal community culture can play a part in  decision-making about how an infant will be fed as the infant belongs to a  large family from birth.32 If the grandmother of an infant did not  breastfeed she may encourage the mother to bottle feed as this allows the  grandmother to have control of the infant and gives the mother the freedom to  go out.33 | 
         
           | 7.31 | The  committee noted that on the site inspection to the remote community of  Kowanyama, the male members of the committee were asked to leave a gathering of  women discussing breastfeeding.  | 
         
           | 7.32 | The  South Australian Government notes that Aboriginal women also tend to be younger  mothers than non-Aboriginal women and adolescent Aboriginal mothers may be less  inclined to breastfeed their first child as breastfeeding impacts on their  freedom, body image, social interaction, education and lifestyle choices.34  The issues we see are;  young mothers too shy to breast feed in public but their social life is at the  local shopping centre.35  | 
         
           | 7.33 | Societal  pressures and changes also play a part with health workers identifying the ease  of bottle feeding from a young woman's perspective.  Aboriginal women like  to be out and about doing other things and feel that it is much easier to make  a bottle and take it with them than to spend the time breastfeeding it just  takes too much time.36 | 
         
           |  |  | 
         
           | Housing | 
         
           | 7.34 | The committee noted when undertaking a site  inspection in the remote communities of Pormpuraaw and Kowanyama, that the lack  of housing was an issue. Anecdotal evidence indicated that there could be up to  25 people living in the one house. The Royal Flying Doctor Service (RFDS)  consider that environmental factors such as overcrowding in houses have a huge  impact.  | 
         
           | 7.35 | Young Indigenous  women are often shy about their bodies and it may be impossible to breastfeed  in private in overcrowded conditions. An overcrowded house does not  provide a place where a new mother can breastfeed in a clean and safe environment,  and thus may be a factor in why a mother may choose not to breastfeed. | 
         
           |  |  | 
         
           | Travel | 
         
           | 7.36 | In many  instances women from remote areas of Australia are required to travel long distances  for the birth of their babies and this can cause financial hardship and social disruption.  Typically, pregnant women will leave their communities between 36 to 38 weeks  gestation to await birth, usually alone, in a regional centre. The facilities  in these settings vary but are often very simple. Mookai   Rosie in Cairns,  provides accommodation support services, health support services and advocacy  to the mothers and women that travel from remote communities to Cairns  for prenatal, antenatal and medical services. At Mookai Rosie the health  workers educate and encourage the women to breastfeed, by talking about the  positive benefits and how it is the best way to care for the baby. 
 As a health worker, I take care of clients' appointments and their education on whatever it may be: breastfeeding, nutrition, diabetes. I  also do their dressings, I will escort people to appointments if they need me  there and I will be with them in the birth suite. Anything that they need me to  do, I will do for them.37 | 
         
           | 7.37 | Women may have to leave other children behind  while they are away giving birth. This can lead to high levels of anxiety as  there may be social issues in the community such as domestic violence and  alcohol abuse which can lead to a mother having very valid concerns about her  children who remain in the community.38 Women may also be concerned about not being  able to give birth 'on country'. | 
         
           | 7.38 | The Patient Assistant Travel Scheme (PATS) is a Commonwealth program which is  administered locally with the states and territories.39 It provides financial assistance for people  who need to travel for medical reasons. Women from Cape York communities  in Queensland who are required to travel to give birth are also able to be  accompanied by an escort of their choice paid for by PATS. Other states have  different rules for escorts. This  leaves Indigenous women in the position where they may not have any support  during the time before and after the birth which may impact on breastfeeding. Mothers  from the remote community of Kowanyama indicated to the committee that escorts  were very important and should be available to all women who need to travel to  give birth. | 
         
           |  |  | 
         
           | Low birth weight – compounding issues | 
         
           | 7.39 | Under  nutrition and poor growth among Aboriginal infants is well reported within remote  communities. More Aboriginal children present with low birth weights (12.5 per  cent) than non Indigenous children (6.2 per cent).40Despite widespread and prolonged  breastfeeding by Aboriginal mothers in remote areas, their infants have poor  growth patterns after six months and suffer recurrent infections. | 
         
           | 7.40 | Low  birth weight (LBW) is an extremely important factor in infant mortality. US  data indicates that only 0.5 per cent of babies born with normal weight die in  the first year of life compared to 10.2 per cent of babies born under 2500g and  45.3 per cent of babies born under 1500g. Besides its impact on infant  mortality, LBW is associated with increased childhood ill health including that  from respiratory illnesses, impaired growth after birth and brain development  problems. Although these complications increase in frequency with decreasing birth  weight, even children at the upper end of the LBW range, who require no  intensive care, have poorer outcomes than children with normal birth weight.41 | 
         
           | 7.41 | In  October 2005 rates of underweight children under the age of five years in  remote communities across the Northern Territory (NT)were reported to be  between eight per cent and 18 per cent (compared to an expected rate of three  per cent). Across the NT, nine per cent of children were recorded as wasted,  with some regions recording rates of up to 14 per cent. It has been said that  international relief agencies regard a prevalence of wasting of children more  than eight per cent as a nutritional emergency. Poor growth is a serious  problem among Aboriginal infants in remote communities across Australia. Within this context breastfeeding provides  protection against infections and the cycle of growth faltering.  | 
         
           | 7.42 | However,  the importance of appropriate solids introduced at an appropriate time to  complement breast feeding should not be overlooked. Although breastfeeding  helps to protect against infection such as gastroenteritis, it cannot be  expected to completely prevent such infections in the context of poor living  conditions and food insecurity. Continued breastfeeding is beneficial for  Aboriginal infants and their health would probably be much worse if they were  bottle fed on infant formula in unhygienic living conditions.42 | 
         
           | 7.43 | The  RFDS noted that solids are often not introduced at the recommended six month  mark. Either breastfeeding continued beyond six months or infant formula was  introduced but no solids were introduced. This can lead to issues of  anaemia and failure to thrive, especially at seven to eight months old and  onwards.43 | 
         
           |  |  | 
         
           | Successful strategies to encourage  breastfeeding in Indigenous communities | 
         
           | 7.44 | There  are programs that are working in Indigenous communities. A significant  achievement of the National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Nutrition  Strategy and Action Plan (NATSINSAP) has been the inclusion of 'nutrition' as a  core unit in the new national Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health  Worker competencies, which form part of the Health Training Package released in  February 2007. This means every Health Worker undertaking the 'practice' stream  at a Certificate IV level around Australia will study nutrition as part of  their training. There will also now be the opportunity for Health Workers to  specialise in nutrition within the new national competencies at the Certificate  IV and Diploma levels.44 | 
         
           | 7.45 | Queensland Health has developed a package called  Growing Strong for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders. The 'Growing Strong'  resources provide information about nutrition during pregnancy and early  childhood, with a specific focus promoting breastfeeding and supporting mothers  with common breastfeeding issues. Regular in-service training targeting  community based Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Workers is  delivered by nutritionists in partnership with Aboriginal Nutrition Promotion  Officers.45 | 
         
           | Figure 7.1     Extract from “Young Mums - Growing Strong:  Feeding you and your baby” Source Queensland  Health, exhibit 10, p 2. | 
         
           | 7.46 | In  response to requests from remote store managers and health centre staff, the NT  Feeding Guidelines project of 2005 developed a set of guidelines to selling  infant formula in remote stores. The guidelines suggest that stores do not  promote infant formula and bottles, and stock only one type of both. Stores are  encouraged to stock and promote a range of infant feeding cups.46 | 
         
           | 7.47 | NATSINSAP  recommends that there needs to be more family focussed nutrition promotion,  resourcing programs and disseminating and communicating 'good practice'. In  this context 'good practice' as defined by the community and health professionals,  includes understanding community priorities, family, culture, preferred methods  of communication and learning, in addition to an up-to-date knowledge of the  prevention and management of diet related disease. However, across Australia identification and dissemination of 'good practice'  nutrition and breastfeeding information currently occurs in an ad hoc manner  and resources to implement this important area have so far been limited.47 | 
         
           | 7.48 | Given the proven short and long-term health  benefits that breastfeeding provides, the  committee considers it crucial that the Commonwealth Government take a lead  role in promoting breastfeeding within Indigenous Australian communities. | 
         
           | 7.49 | Recommendation 20That  the Commonwealth Government promote breastfeeding within Indigenous Australian  communities as a major preventative health measure. 
 | 
       
      
       
       
         
           | 1 | David  Q, sub 37, pp 1-2. Back | 
         
           | 2 | College of Lactation Consultants Victoria  Inc, sub 142, p 2. Back | 
         
           | 3 | Ferluga R, sub 108, p 8. Back | 
         
           | 4 | Malone G, Australian Rural Nurses and  Midwives, transcript, 23 May 2007,  p 3. Back | 
         
           | 5 | Western Australian Country Health Service  – South West Dietitians, sub 308, p 1. Back | 
         
           | 6 | Malone G, Australian Rural Nurses and  Midwives, transcript, 23 May 2007,  p 6. Back | 
         
           | 7 | Willis  R, sub 193, p 2. Back | 
         
           | 8 | Stamp G and Casanova H, ‘A breastfeeding  study in a rural population in South Australia’, Rural and Remote Health (2006), vol 6, issue 2, article no 495. Back | 
         
           | 9 | Australian Rural Nurses and Midwives, sub  299, p 4. Back | 
         
           | 10 | Australian Rural Nurses and Midwives, sub  299, p 4. Back | 
         
           | 11 | Western Australian Country Health Service  – South West Dietitians, sub 308, p 1. Back | 
         
           | 12 | Ward K, sub 56, p 4. Back | 
         
           | 13 | National Aboriginal and Torres Strait  Islander Nutrition Strategy and Action Plan (NATSINSAP) Steering Committee, sub  302, p 2. Back | 
         
           | 14 | National Aboriginal and Torres Strait  Islander Nutrition Strategy and Action Plan (NATSINSAP) Steering Committee, sub  302, p 2. Back | 
         
           | 15 | Australian  Bureau of Statistics, 2004-05 National  Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Survey (2006), cat no 4715.0,  p 20. Back | 
         
           | 16 | Government of South    Australia, sub 274, p 8. Back | 
         
           | 17 | Government of South    Australia, sub 274, p 8. Back | 
         
           | 18 | Northern Territory Department of Health  and Community Services, sub 334, p 3. Back | 
         
           | 19 | NSW Centre for Public Health Nutrition,  sub 178, p 9. Back | 
         
           | 20 | NSW Centre for Public Health Nutrition,  sub 178, p 9. Back | 
         
           | 21 | Malone G, Australian Rural Nurses and Midwives, transcript, 23 May 2007, p 4. Back | 
         
           | 22 | Hall J MP, transcript, 4 April 2007, p 22. Back | 
         
           | 23 | Government of South    Australia, sub 274, p 8. Back | 
         
           | 24 | NSW Pregnancy & Newborn Services  Network, sub 171, p 2. Back | 
         
           | 25 | Northern Territory Department of Health  and Community Services, sub 334, p 2. Back | 
         
           | 26 | Malone G, Australian Rural Nurses and  Midwives, transcript, 23 May 2007,  p 5. Back | 
         
           | 27 | Queensland Health, sub 307, p 5. Back | 
         
           | 28 | Queensland Health, sub 307, p 5. Back | 
         
           | 29 | Binns C, sub 86, p 5. Back | 
         
           | 30 | NSW Pregnancy & Newborn Services  Network, sub 171, p 1. Back | 
         
           | 31 | NSW Pregnancy & Newborn Services  Network, sub 171, p 2. Back | 
         
           | 32 | NSW Pregnancy & Newborn Services  Network, sub 171, p 3. Back | 
         
           | 33 | NSW Pregnancy & Newborn Services  Network, sub 171, p 3. Back | 
         
           | 34 | Government of South    Australia, sub 274, p 8. Back | 
         
           | 35 | NSW Pregnancy & Newborn Services  Network, sub 171, p 3. Back | 
         
           | 36 | NSW Pregnancy & Newborn Services  Network, sub 171, p 3. Back | 
         
           | 37 | Simpson  B, Mookai Rosie Bi-Bayan, transcript, 4 April 2007, p 12. Back | 
         
           | 38 | Yates K, Cairns Base Hospital, transcript,  4 April 2007, p 35.  Back | 
         
           | 39 | The committee notes that the Senate  Community Affairs Committee is currently undertaking an inquiry into the  Patient Assistant Travel Scheme. Information can be found at the Senate  Community Affairs Committee website, viewed on 30 July 2007 at http://www.aph.gov.au/Senate/committee/clac_ctte/pats/index.htm. Back | 
         
           | 40 | The Royal Australasian College of  Physicians, sub 174, p 5. Back | 
         
           | 41 | Australian  Medical Association, sub 358, p 8.  Back | 
         
           | 42 | National Aboriginal and Torres Strait  Islander Nutrition Strategy and Action Plan (NATSINSAP) Steering Committee, sub  302, pp 3-4.  Back | 
         
           | 43 | Felsch J, RFDS, transcript, 4 April 2007, p 3. Back | 
         
           | 44 | National Aboriginal and Torres Strait  Islander Nutrition Strategy and Action Plan (NATSINSAP) Steering Committee, sub  302, p 7. Back | 
         
           | 45 | National Aboriginal and Torres Strait  Islander Nutrition Strategy and Action Plan (NATSINSAP) Steering Committee, sub  302, p 8. Back | 
         
           | 46 | National Aboriginal and Torres Strait  Islander Nutrition Strategy and Action Plan (NATSINSAP) Steering Committee, sub  302, p 4. Back | 
         
           | 47 | National Aboriginal and Torres Strait  Islander Nutrition Strategy and Action Plan (NATSINSAP) Steering Committee, sub  302, p 10. Back |