Searching for better, not tougher, ways to fight crime

  • 📰 theage
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 52 sec. here
  • 2 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 24%
  • Publisher: 77%

Australia Headlines News

Australia Latest News,Australia Headlines

Nick Crofts is convinced that, unless law enforcement and health professionals work together, our hospitals will remain clogged, our jails full and those with mental health issues stuffed into the court system. | NAKED CITY by John Silvester

“We use jail to mop up our failures. It saves us from dealing with the real problems that require funding,” he says.

The recent mental health royal commission recommended, when possible, health professionals, rather than police, lead the response in “critical mental health crises”. By the time a mental health issue has become a crisis, it is often too late. It requires a response in minutes, but those first on the scene have to deal with people who have often been failed by the system for years.

In most cases, there are key intervention points where treatment would avoid the flashpoint and would prove cheaper, smarter and more humane.In 2005-06, of the 185 people charged with homicide in Scotland, 25 per cent were under 21; 60 per cent were 30 or younger; and 60 per cent were drunk. Crofts says McClusky showed vision of a stabbing committed by a teenager running down the street, then asked: “Who is this kid?”

Scottish police used to be all about enforcement, now it is intervention first. Recently, all Scottish operational police were equipped with a drug overdose nasal spray, showing how policing and health overlap.

 

Thank you for your comment. Your comment will be published after being reviewed.
Please try again later.
We have summarized this news so that you can read it quickly. If you are interested in the news, you can read the full text here. Read more:

 /  🏆 8. in AU

Australia Latest News, Australia Headlines

Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.

Judo holds firm on growth plans as troubled loans riseJudo Bank said all of its prospectus forecasts had been met, including on bad debts and expenses, which rose sharply as it grew.
Source: FinancialReview - 🏆 2. / 90 Read more »

Hang on, doesn’t Murdoch support free speech?EDITORIAL | The Murdoch media like to be seen as champions of free speech. For any Murdoch to sue a small website for saying bad things about him is astonishing. | The Age's View Poor example. You can’t go around accusing people of up to & including Treason & have no permissible evidence to back you up & be relying purely on heresay. They were given a chance to retract & refused. This is a whinging lefty rag who thought they could say & do as they pleased This is a very strange test: “[W]ith his endless opportunities to have his say, suing for supposed reputational damage is not appropriate”. On that basis, since The Age runs a daily editorial, I ought to be able to falsely claim The Age’s editors are a bunch of child molesters. Yeah go on, protect your mates.
Source: theage - 🏆 8. / 77 Read more »

Inflation has touched ‘every part’ of our economy: Woolworths CEOWoolworths CEO Brad Banducci says inflation has touched every part of Australia's economy “for good or bad”. “Whether it’s the transportation costs, the warehouse costs, often the packaging costs – so there’s a lot of material issues that have been flowing through into the long life categories as well,” he said during a media conference in Sydney. He would be the last person to trust for an honest opinion on food prices, followed by a number of politicians
Source: SkyNewsAust - 🏆 7. / 78 Read more »

Google accused of airbrushing carbon emissions in flight search resultsTweak to search engine effectively halves the environmental impact stated for each trip lies dammed lies and data analasis , subtle changes of scale in a data set can show sydney trains travelling back in time ,i know i have them
Source: GuardianAus - 🏆 1. / 98 Read more »

Remarkable $16m act of generosity from Kobe Bryant’s widow after watershed decisionThe widow of NBA Hall of Famer Kobe Bryant will donate $23 million in damages won against the Los Angeles County to the Mamba And Mambacita Sports Foundation. 7NEWS
Source: 7NewsAustralia - 🏆 11. / 71 Read more »