Star Weekly - Wyndham - 25th May 2022

Page 1

Established in 1902 as the

proudly serving Wyndham

25 MAY, 2022

12496404-AV22-21

FREE DIGITAL EDITION

SIG N U P N O W!

Cultures on the runway

(Joe Mastroianni). 281137_01

The Wyndham Multicultural Festival will be held this Sunday, May 29 at Stockland Point Cook Town Centre. The event will run from noon to 9pm and will feature 50 individual performances from local artists, musicians, dancers, singers, theatre and a runway display of traditional costumes. Altona Meadows resident and fashion designer Ganda Marpaung said he decided to take part in the festival to promote Indonesian culture. “Indonesia is the next country to Australia, the closest one, so why not learn each other’s culture through the costumes, because people love fashion,“ he said. Mr Marpaung said he had designed a number of dresses inspired by a Disney princess with an Indonesian twist. “It’s more like bright and colourful, lots of accessories, lots of material would be on it,“ he said. Food trucks, marquees and local restaurants will provide hungry festival-goers with Chinese, Malaysian, Thai, Indian and Mexican cuisine options. Lesty Lestyowati models an Indonesian inspired Princess Elsa dress that will be presented on the runway.

Healthcare under strain By Fatima Halloum A Werribee nurse says the healthcare sector in Wyndham is “slammed” amid high wait times and appointment unavailability. Mary Elmaoula, who works at a clinic in Point Cook, said a shortage of GPs and the general public’s desire to receive immediate medical attention for non-emergency issues contributed to the load. “The demand in the western suburbs, especially in Wyndham, it is hard,” Ms Elmaoula said. “[People say] ‘why can’t I see a GP?’ I’m sorry, I just don’t have an appointment.”

Ms Elmaoula said the mounting pressures on GP clinics subsequently places additional strain on the only emergency department in the municipality and takes up limited beds. “We have things like nurse-on-call, SICK [13SICK], doctors that can come to your house … We have all these things that people can utilise,” she said. “Our emergency department is already inundated.” Manor Lakes mum Veronica Rowe began searching for an available doctor at 11am last Tuesday after her asthmatic two-year-old had breathing difficulties and didn’t respond to ventolin. She contacted three respiratory

clinics and four local doctors but was unable to secure an appointment. “We tried seven places, and we couldn’t get into any of them … and we don’t just want to always go to the emergency room because the government is telling us that they’re flooded,” Ms Rowe said. Ms Rowe managed to find a doctor about 5pm, who observed her son and referred her to emergency. “He went to Werribee first, and he was sitting in the waiting room for close to 12 hours, they said that he was fine to go home,” she said. The family later went to the Royal Children’s Hospital for treatment.

LOOKING TO BUY, SELL, RENT OR INVEST? Professionals Triwest Real Estate Servicing the Real Estate needs of the Wyndham community since 1976

9741 5900 | 6A Watton Street, Werribee triwest.com.au 12541456-SN21-22

Ms Rowe said the healthcare sector in the west was “lacking” and needed to cater for the growing population. “If we had accessed a GP at 11am, maybe we wouldn’t have had to go to the emergency,” she said. A Mercy Health spokesperson said that while the hospital had times when its services were experiencing extremely high demand, it aimed to respond to each category of patient within an appropriate time frame. “Our health service has substantial and strong processes to encourage patients and families to escalate or report any concerns about their care,” the spokesperson said.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.