Calls for dedicated committee to monitor medicine and strengthen patient safety

Calls for dedicated committee to monitor medicine and strengthen patient safety
Calls have been made for the establishment of a dedicated committee under the Constitution to monitor medicine and strengthen patient safety during submissions to the Constitutional Review Commission.

86-year-old resident of Derrick Street in Raiwaqa and former community nurse Kite Baleiva raised concerns over the safety, storage and regulation of medicine, proposing that a formal committee be created to oversee the medicine used in the country, particularly injections.

She says the committee should be responsible for ensuring the medicine is safe for public use by checking expiry dates and monitoring proper storage and handling, noting that injections in particular require refrigeration and stricter oversight.

Baleiva says while tablets have defined shelf lives and are easier to manage, injections require closer monitoring due to storage conditions.

She also raised concerns on patient rights, stating that medical consent must always be obtained before any treatment or procedure is carried out.

She highlights concerns raised during the COVID-19 period, saying members of the public had reported being compelled or forced to take injections without proper consent.

Meanwhile, 54-year-old Nanise Vucago, referred to earlier constitutional arrangements, noting that Fiji's 1970, 1990 and 1997 Constitutions contained references to God and Christianity, and said this should be reconsidered in the current constitutional framework.

Vucago also opposed Fiji's secular state provisions, arguing that the country's historical and cultural foundations were rooted in Christianity and that these values should be reflected in the Constitution.

Insert:Vucago on the law 24th June.


Vucago also raised concerns that citizens were not adequately consulted during previous constitutional processes and welcomed the current review as an opportunity for public participation.

On citizenship, Vucago says the definition of a Fijian should be more closely linked to iTaukei identity and registration under the Vola ni Kawa Bula together with traditional structures such as yavusa, mataqali and tokatoka.

She also argues that ethnic group identities should be retained for policy development, research and statistical purposes.

She further calls the Commission on resource ownership and benefit-sharing, calling for fair returns to landowning units from minerals and other natural resources and stronger indigenous participation in resource governance.

Vucago also calls for stronger environmental protection provisions in the Constitution and proposed the establishment of an environmental taskforce with powers to enforce environmental laws and address pollution and environmental degradation.

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