For all APY Media queries
please contact :
Michael Owen at www.owenmediarelations.com.au
This year, 2019, marks the centenary of the ‘Spanish’ Influenza pandemic reaching Australia. It is believed that the pandemic of 1918-20 killed at least 40 million people worldwide and perhaps as many as 100 million,1 easily surpassing the 20 million combatants and civilians who died during the Great War. It was the most lethal pandemic of modern times and, indeed, the most lethal since the Bubonic Plague, the Black Death, of the fourteenth century. While AIDS has caused about 35 million deaths over the last four decades, the influenza pandemic may have killed two or three times that many people in about 18 months.
It was not until the 1930s that influenza was discovered to be caused by a virus, and it was only in the 1990s that research on corpses retrieved from Arctic permafrost, and from tissue samples stored in medical museums, revealed that the 1919 Influenza was a mutation of an
avian influenza that had adapted to human hosts. Alarmingly, it was strikingly similar to the H1N1 strain of swine influenza that affected much of the world in 2009.2
The virulent strain of influenza responsible for so many deaths is believed to have first broken out in August 1918 in military camps in western France and southern England, but there is some evidence that it may have originated in crowded military camps in the USA, before travelling with the troops across the Atlantic to France.3 The virus spread rapidly throughout the Allied and German armies, killing thousands of troops on both sides of the Western Front. It soon dispersed throughout Europe’s civilian population via the railways, roads and waterways, killing more than two million people, including about 200,000 in England and Wales, 240,000 in France and a similar number in Germany and perhaps
450,000 in Russia.4 In Spain about 260,000 people died. That country remained neutral during the war and, unlike most of the combatant nations, did not impose press censorship. News of the ravages of influenza there spread around the world; that is why it became
known as ‘Spanish flu’.5 The virus crossed the Atlantic in August and within a few months about 675,000 Americans had died, more than the USA lost in all its wars of the twentieth century.6
By the time of the Armistice in November 1918, the virus was raging across the globe, spread across the continents by trains and cars and across the oceans by ships. It is estimated that 18 million people may have died in India and perhaps 10 million in China. In Indonesia the death toll was about 1.5 million. Millions more died across South America and Africa. It is estimated that 300,000 people died in South Africa.7
Most people are familiar with influenza’s symptoms; a sore throat, severe cough, shivering fits, headaches and muscular pain, vomiting and diarrhoea. The symptoms of ‘Spanish’ Influenza were the same, only more severe. The attack commonly lasted three or four days
but it left its victims weak and debilitated for weeks afterwards. It was the pneumonial complications that developed in about 10 or 20 per cent of cases that caused many of the fatalities. In those days, prior to the discovery of antibiotics, the only treatment for pneumonia was complete bed-rest and careful nursing, but even then the mortality rate was usually about 30%.8 In those flu-sufferers who developed pneumonia, infection attacked the respiratory membranes and blood vessels in the lungs, causing the lungs to fill with blood and fluid. Fever and delirium set in and the patient usually lapsed into a coma within a day or two. The body began to darken due to greatly reduced blood oxygen levels and death usually occurred within another day or two. In particularly severe cases, a fit, healthy young man who complained of a sore throat in the morning might lapse into a coma by lunchtime and be dead by nightfall. After death the body would continue to darken and sometimes
turned completely black. For this reason the epidemic was sometimes known as the ‘Black Flu’.9 Mortality from influenza is usually confined to the very young and the elderly, but the 1919 virus caused a disproportionate number of deaths amongst those aged between 25 and 44, particularly men.10 Infection rates were relatively low for people aged over 50, possibly the result of immunity acquired through exposure to an earlier pandemic.
When news came in October 1918 from South Africa of the high death toll there, the Australian government imposed strict quarantine procedures at all ports.11 Australian troops returning home from the war, especially those aboard ships that stopped in South Africa en route, were quarantined aboard their ships in port or in isolation camps such as Torrens Island, near Port Adelaide, until it was clear that none were infected. While these measures failed to stop the pandemic reaching Australia, they delayed it significantly, by which time its virulence seems to have diminished; the virus had evidently mutated into a less virulent strain than the one that had raged around the world in late 1918.12
6 April 2020
After a complex five-year journey, APY workers have approved a new enterprise bargaining agreement.
The agreement will provide a secure foundation for a fair, reliable and consistent structure for their employment terms and conditions.
This is a significant industrial relations milestone for APY as an organisation, which has taken the opportunity to tailor an EBA for its specific needs as an indigenous land council that operates in accordance with the Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara Land Rights Act.
APY management representatives have been working to establish an EBA since 2015, when it was discovered that APY required improvement and consistency for its employees’ terms and conditions.
The EBA has been negotiated between the employer, employees and bargaining representatives to establish a fair working wage, and terms and conditions of employment, for current and new employees.
This has taken an extensive amount of time because of the transient nature of some bargaining committee members, which had delayed the process.
APY General Manager Richard King welcomed endorsement of the EBA by the Fair Work Commission. “This is a first in the history of APY and will provide a secure base for fair, reliable and consistent terms and conditions of employment,” Mr King said.
“I want to take this opportunity to thank everyone for their participation. This is a fantastic outcome that secures excellent terms and conditions for current and future staff of APY.”
Chamber of Commerce NT, which represents individuals and groups in remote Aboriginal organisations, has since 2015 supported APY management, staff and the Australian Services Union.
“Solidifying terms and conditions for staff through the negotiation of an Enterprise Agreement creates stability and favourable terms for workers,” a spokesperson said.
“This also provides an excellent platform for APY to follow given the exhausting arrangements under the Modern Award Provisions and blurred lines between industry and occupational coverages.
“We have been honoured to work alongside the team at APY and we look forward to the future journey ahead.”
The EBA was approved on April 2, 2020 and will operate from April 9, 2020. The nominal expiry date of the agreement is April 1, 2024.
For further information please contact Richard King on 0401 124 876.
For media enquiries contact Michael Owen on 0400 042 214.
For all APY Media queries
please contact
Michael Owen at www.owenmediarelations.com.au
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