Children and young parents’ rights in Australia
- There is a tremendous decrease in infant death rate since 2008.
There is established accessibility of stage 2 medical care without getting authority from the law court.
Establishment of e-safety commissioner office which was to guarantee the security of children
Some of the negative progress include
There is evidence of inequalities in the provision of education.
Children in and out care had shown some increment by 18 percent for a very long period.
Supporting young parents
The government has ventured in to support most of the young parents who are having mental problems.
The government has created different employment opportunities for the youth, mainly focusing on the young parents who have a problem accessing basic needs.
There is established cohesion with the existing service provider who always gives reports on the community progress on medical centers and extended family support to young parents.
- a) Reduction in death rate will increase the country’s population, which will lead to a developed economy (Tinanoff et al. 2019).
- It is aimed to improve the quality of social classes of young parents to optimize the systems of health care sectors in Australia.
- The established policies by Australian government bodies have recognized the principle and primary health promotion (Telfer et al. 2017). Accessibility to free subsidized treatment to every child in Australia.
- I can advocate these policies to children since it offers quality health care to every child and family without considering the background
- Yes. These policies recognize equity since health care should be provided to every child across the country.
References
Telfer, M. M., Tollit, M. A., Pace, C. C., & Pang, K. C. (2018). Australian standards of care and treatment guidelines for transgender and gender diverse children and adolescents. Medical Journal of Australia, 209(3), 132-136.
Tinanoff, N., Baez, R. J., Diaz Guillory, C., Donly, K. J., Feldens, C. A., McGrath, C., … & Songpaisan, Y. (2019). Early childhood caries epidemiology, aetiology, risk assessment, societal burden, management, education, and policy: Global perspective. International journal of paediatric dentistry, 29(3), 238-248.