• HEALTH ADVISOR: Botox gets a makeover

    BOTOX, best known for smoothing out wrinkles and affixing permanent smiles on celebrities, is also making a name for itself in treating more serious health issues for women such as overactive bladders (OAB).

    An overactive bladder contracts involuntarily too often, sometimes without warning, and leads to the frustration of always feeling like you need to pee, or the embarrassment of wetting your pants.

    Dr Angamuthu Arun from the Waikiki Specialist Centre says there are a number of treatments that work by calming the nerves and muscles around the bladder.

    “These medicines are available in different forms, including tablets, patches, or liquids,” Dr Arun says.

    But the treatments aren’t always beneficial.

    “Some women may have tried more than two medications and cannot tolerate the side effects of the medications,” Dr Arun says.

    “These side effects may be dry mouth, constipation and lack of concentration and feeling drowsy.

    “For these women, Botox injections to the bladder may be offered as a treatment.”

    Botox was recently approved as a treatment for OAB (including going on the PBS so it’s not so pricey) that’s delivered via injection.

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    Dr Angamuthu Arun

    Blocking

    It works by blocking the muscles and nerves that lead to a feeling of urgently needing to urinate. This involves passing a small telescope (cystoscope) into the bladder through the urethra (the tube that carries your wee from the bladder to outside the body) and injecting between 10 and 20 injections of Botox into the bladder wall.

    “Botox is highly effective in relieving the frequency and urgency of needing to go to the toilet and reduces urinary incontinence in majority of women undergoing the injection,” says Dr Arun.

    “For the majority of women, the beneficial effects are usually seen three to four days after the injection. The Botox injection is expected to last for six to twelve months, but this will vary for each woman.

    “For some women, a single treatment is all that is required: others will need repeated injections.”
    There can be minor side effects, such as urinary retention which means the treatment’s worked too well and the patient finds it hard to urinate on their own, but that can usually be sorted out easily and only a few instances will they need to self-catheterise, which means passing a tube into the bladder a couple of times a day to empty.

    There can also be a little blood in the urine, but that usually sorts itself out quickly with no treatment needed, and there is a risk on increased urinary tract infactions, which can be treated with antibiotics.

    Dr Arun says the treatment is so simple these days that patients can return to work the next day and don’t usually need to be seen until a check-up a couple of weeks afterwards.

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  • HEALTH ADVISOR: Heart disease coalition

    A NEW seven-partner coalition has been formed to tackle rheumatic heart disease (RHD).

    RHD is a third-world disease generally associated with overcrowded slums, as it’s triggered by a simple bacterial throat infection that runs riot in the body if left unchecked, but Australia has an alarmingly high rate in indigenous communities.

    Head of the End RHD coalition, and Telethon Kids director Jonathon Carapetis says one in 43 indigenous people living in remote areas have RHD.

    “This country has the largest disparity in cardiovascular disease outcomes in the world and it is simply unacceptable,” says Prof Carpetis. “We need new solutions to prevent and treat the infections that lead to ARF and RHD, and to reduce suffering and death from RHD itself, but we will only be treading water if we don’t also address the key social determinants of the disease.”

    The coalition will link its researchers with health workers, families and organisations on the front line.

  • Christmas Feature: Lighting Leedy

    TAKE a break from everyday life and be transported into a magically mesmerizing fantasy world at the 2016 Light Up Leederville Carnival tomorrow,  Sunday December 4.

    The 2016 Light Up Leederville Carnival will use solar energy to power all stages, leaving all diesel generators behind, to be more environmentally friendly.

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    Carnival-goers will be immersed in enchanted raining lights as they stroll down the Leederville Light Walk at Carr Place, which features a five-metre-high and eight-metre-wide LED geodesic dome, interactive projection displays and the stunning LED Luna Leederville angel wings that must be seen to be believed.

    For the younger ones, Kidsville spans the Oxford Street reserve and skate park and boasts glitter face painting, sand art, inflatable sports games, sideshow alley, nature play and the highly anticipated favourite Junk Craft activity.

    The visual feast will be topped off with the official Light Up ceremony at 7.45pm when Vincent mayor John Carey turns the summer lights on.

    The carnival takes place from 4pm – 9pm.

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    Perth becomes a wonderland

    PERTH will transform into a Christmas wonderland this holiday season, sparkling with lights and enlivened by a variety of festive events.

    Santa will roam the city handing out goodies every weekend from November 26, and daily from December 21.

    The RAC Christmas pageant starts from the corner of William Street and St George’s Terrace on Saturday December 3, which is the same day  An Outback Christmas kicks off, bringing Santa’s workshop down under for family-friendly crafting on Forrest Chase.

    On Saturday December 10 the WA Symphony Orchestra will enchant thousands for a night of music under the stars, while you can look forward to another night of music, the ’IGA Carols by Candlelight’, on the following Sunday, December 18.

    Between December 20 – 23, over 100 performers from around WA will perform the Christmas nativity story with live animals and colourful costumes.

    There are many other ways to get festive in Perth, which you can read about at http://www.experienceperth.com

  • CHRISTMAS FEATURE: Happy return

    THEATRE star John O’Hara says he’s blessed returning to Perth to showcase his new cabaret A Very Merry Christmas this December.

    O’Hara grew up in Perth, attending John Curtin College of the Arts in Fremantle as a young boy and the Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts (WAAPA).

    “I took drama classes to work on my acting skills but I didn’t realise I could sing until I was actually cast in a school musical,” O’Hara says.

    Since graduating, he’s juggled gigs between Perth and the east coast, following the job prospects.

    His career has also given him the chance to travel the world.

    • John O’Hara’s back in Perth for a Christmas cabaret.
    • John O’Hara’s back in Perth for a Christmas cabaret.

    Being cast in Wicked allowed O’Hara to tick off his bucket list.

    “I think travelling is one of the perks of the job,” he said.

    “Although it is for work, I make an effort to go out and explore the places that I am blessed to be in.

    “It can be glamorous but it can also be quite difficult,” he said.

    “Working in another country with no access to things that you would usually have can get pretty tricky.”

    O’Hara is looking forward to making his return to Perth where he can showcase the cabaret he co-wrote with a friend.

    “It is nice to come home and premiere it in front of friends and family in Perth,” he said.

    A Very Merry Christmas will be showcased Downstairs at The Maj from December 15 – December 17.

    “We bring it back to the old-school American Christmas TV specials of the 50s where the boys are in suits and the girls are in dresses,” he said.

    by HOLLY COOMEY

     

  • 40kmh a ‘big win’

    SCARBOROUGH Beach Road through the Mt Hawthorn town centre will now have a 40kmh speed limit.

    It’s a “big win for the community” and “good for the local economy” says Vincent mayor John Carey.

    Main Roads agreed to the reduced speed after lobbying by the Mt Hawthorn Hub and Vincent council, which believes a pedestrian-friendly town centre will become more vibrant.

    Speeds can get down to 30kmh in built-up areas of major European cities like London and Barcelona, so Mr Carey says there’s evidence for the success of lower speed limits.

    •Mt Hawthorn locals Mario Tolardo, Alex Castle, and Elle Gonzales-Skuja celebrate the implementation of a 40km speed-limit through the town centre with Vincent Mayor John Carey. Photo by Trilokesh Chanmugam
    •Mt Hawthorn locals Mario Tolardo, Alex Castle, and Elle Gonzales-Skuja celebrate the implementation of a 40km speed-limit through the town centre with Vincent Mayor John Carey. Photo by Trilokesh Chanmugam

    Hub vice-chair Alex Castle says the reform will make families feel safer because they won’t have to worry about cars whizzing past kids.

    Ms Castle says local businesses have welcomed the reform, but it’s not completely without dissent.

    While the Chook was taking a photo of business owners celebrating, a grumpy passerby heckled Mr Carey because he thought it would increase his daily commute.

    The mayor tried explaining the success of European trials, but the disgruntled man stormed off before Mr Carey got to the bit about research showing travel times are not affected.

    “This view that it then causes greater traffic times is actually not true, based on the research,” Mr Carey later said.

    “By reducing speed in the town centre you’re making it more people-friendly, making it safer for people to cross the road and walk in the town centre.

    “It brings people in and makes it more vibrant … cars speeding through the town centre is not good for the local economy.”

    Mr Carey would also like to see the 40kmh limit extended to residential streets, but Vincent council has been “butting-heads” with Main Roads over the issue and it looks unlikely to proceed.

    by TRILOKESH CHANMUGAM

    PICT BOX A4 LANDSCAPE

  • Move to incinerators

    VINCENT council has moved a step closer to sending its waste to industrial incinerators.

    The council is part of the Mindarie Regional Council, which has made moves to join with its eastern neighbour in calling for tenders for the construction of an alternative waste facility to divert more rubbish from landfill.

    Although details of the tender are confidential, a report to last week’s Vincent meeting shows it will be asking for a diversion rate of 90 per cent.

    Currently waste to energy is the only technology reaching that level.

    The report says that the MRC is working with the “Strategic Working Group to ensure that every opportunity to be involved in W2E in Western Australia is explored”.

    Opt-out clause

    Vincent mayor John Carey said while the council supported the MRC participating in the tender, it had given itself an opt-out clause by asking for more details.

    “We are taking a very cautious approach,” Mr Carey said.

    “Whilst some councillors supported the tender, others weren’t sure and would like a lot more information.

    “It is still at early stages and we do not know what type of waste to energy facility will be considered.

    “There were concerns raised by some councillors in regard to incinerator waste to energy,” the mayor said.

    Mr Carey says while industry players claim the technology has improved in the last decade and is completely safe, environmental still have concerns.

    Global Anti-Incinerator Alliance pollution prevention coordinator Jane Bremmer said she is “very concerned” that WA residents are amongst the country’s biggest producers of rubbish, particularly in the eastern suburbs.

    Polluting

    “Building incinerators is the wrong way to be going about waste management.

    “Incinerators are highly polluting, dioxin-producing facilities near communities,” Ms Bremmer said.

    “The EMRC need to disclose what technology they are suggesting these local councils go into tender for.”

    She says a far better way to treat the state’s waste problems is to convince people to improve their recycling, adopt home composting and reduce their consumption.

    Ms Bremmer said regional councils such as the MRC are unaccountable.

    “In my opinion, these regional councils have undue powers to make decisions that have long-reaching consequences for our health and environment,” she said.

    Vincent’s support for the MRC joining the tender comes as the current Tamala Park landfill facility is expected to be at capacity by 2024, and the current resource recovery facility contract with BioVision will expire in 2030.

    by CHARLIE SMITH

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  • Heritage gets hip

    LAST Sunday’s Hip on Heritage film festival at the Astor Theatre was a milestone in the Mt Lawley Society’s mission to prove heritage is not just for stuffy history buffs.

    With a separate student category, the festival invited younger film-makers to showcase their work. Society president Paul Collins said he was chuffed with the next generation’s interest in heritage.

    The student category was won by Finnian Williamson, who documented the final days of Mount Lawley’s iconic Planet Video for his short film Empty Shelves.

    • Alfindy Agyputri and Cassandra Lionetto-Civa took home the open award while Finnian Williamson won the student category.
    • Alfindy Agyputri and Cassandra Lionetto-Civa took home the open award while Finnian Williamson won the student category.

    Youngsters Alfindy Agyputri and Cassandra Lionetto-Civa entered their film in the open category and ended up winning it with Sojourners: The story of 124 James St.

    Sojourners told the story of Chinese grocery market Hop Hing and Co, delving into the history of  Northbridge migrant communities and using black and white photos from the state library archives.

    The competition films were interspersed with heritage films from the Society’s archives, including news coverage of the 1962 Commonwealth games in Perth, and a hilariously British-sounding government promo from 1930 called The Sunny South-West.

    Mr Collins was pleased with how the festival went, saying it ticked all the boxes for giving the Mount Lawley society mass appeal.

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  • Free parking stalls

    SANTA won’t be handing out free parking to shoppers in Perth this year with councillors effectively killing the proposal by sending it back to committee.

    Deputy lord mayor James Limnios had led the push for free weekend parking in the CBD, saying it would help retailers compete with suburban shopping centres for the all-important Christmas trade, particularly if it was matched with public transport incentives.

    But Cr Judy McEvoy slammed the scheme as “populist politics”.

    “This is like offering kiddies free chocolate and ice-cream but in reality someone is paying for it — our ratepayers,” Cr McEvoy said.

    Her comments were backed by colleague Janet Davidson, who said the council had already signed off on its budget with full knowledge of the hard economic times.

    Cr Limnios said Perth was experiencing its most challenging economic period in 15 years and 60 per cent of retail profits are made around Christmas.

    An internal estimate placed the foregone parking revenue from 3390 bays over nine days at $742,393, but Cr Limnios’ says that’s “an investment that no logical thinking person could dispute” given improved returns for traders.

    “What I am trying to achieve is to get the people that would otherwise not even think of the city for Christmas shopping to be incentivised with the option of free parking,” Cr Limnios said.

    “I would like to remind my fellow councillors that we are not a for-profit, we are a local government that is here to provide a service to our CBD community that really needs our help now,” Cr Limnios said.

    “This is no time for ‘business as usual’ because if you take a walk around the city block any day of the week and on weekends you can see that business is not doing so well,” Cr Limnios said.

    Lord mayor Lisa Scaffidi agreed times were hard, but sent the item back to the finance committee so it could be looked over by staff.

    “The issue is not competing with suburban retailers but all retailers competing for limited dollars,” Ms Scaffidi said.

    Ms Scaffidi thought a toned-down version of Cr Limnios’s plan might work and asked City officers to look into options for implementation in early 2017.

    by TRILOKESH CHANMUGAM

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  • Leedy goes high tech

    LEEDERVILLE is set to shine on Sunday December 4 with a more tech-savvy Light Up Leederville Carnival.

    The fifth annual carnival, organised by UpBeat Events, will see the traditional fireworks display replaced with a five-metre LED light dome, “magical” raining lights and an angel wings display.

    UpBeat creative director and Vincent councillor Jimmy Murphy said residents will be “impressed” with the calibre of activities at this year’s carnival.

    “Following previous events, community feedback has suggested people are looking for a more cultural experience and this year will definitely bring that,” Mr Murphy said.

    • There’s an LED light dome, magical lights, food, music and even angel wings at this year’s Light Up Leederville carnival. Photo by Trilokesh Chanmugam
    • There’s an LED light dome, magical lights, food, music and even angel wings at this year’s Light Up Leederville carnival. Photo by Trilokesh Chanmugam

    “A lot of our installations are very artistically engaging, with the angel wings being created using local recycled products.

    “We have made sure to appeal to every member of the community,” Mr Murphy said.

    The 2016 event will be powered by Synergy and have a focus on the use of renewable energy. The carnival will also feature market stalls, family attractions and live music.

    Community group Leederville Connect hosted a long table supper earlier this month to help launch the carnival and raise funds for the local community.

    The Leedy strip will be closed to traffic for the festival, which runs from noon to 9pm. Entry is free.

    by CHARLIE SMITH

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  • Debt balloons

    VINCENT council has been left with a $635,000 debt after a search of archives found it pocketed money that was supposed to be destined for benevolent institutions.

    The council has been managing Leederville Gardens Retirement Village since July 2002, and under the village’s constitution surplus funds are supposed to go into a trust account.

    Money from that account is supposed to be distributed by the council to not-for-profit organisations that benefit the community.

    But on five occasions, part or all of the surplus was diverted, meaning the cash ended up in general revenue.

    In the 2007/08 financial year alone (described in Vincent’s budget as significant for its infrastructure works) the council failed to transfer $339,968.

    Current CEO Len Kosova, who’s trying to extricate Vincent from Leederville Gardens, initiated the review after discovering another $362,638 which wasn’t transferred in 2012/13.

    He also found the council hadn’t set up a trust fund, but a reserve account which is described in previous budgets as being available for maintenance at Leederville Gardens or for its expansion, which is against the rules of the constitution.

    All up the council failed to transfer $779,801, but about $360,000 has already been repaid, leaving it with a $417,163 shortfall.

    With the interest that money could have earned taken into account, the council’s debt was pushed over $630,000.

    by STEVE GRANT

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