29 August 2010

Conflicting interests?

An article from the Sunday Star Times by Tim Hume
Professor Felicity Goodyear-Smith is a senior academic and doctor who was commissioned by ACC to research sexual abuse counselling. She is also the daughter-in-law of Centrepoint guru and paedophile Bert Potter, is married to a convicted sex offender and has controversial views on the workings of the 'sexual abuse industry'. Tim Hume examines allegations of Goodyear-Smith's influence in ACC's recent drastic cut in support for victims of sex crimes.
Last October, ACC changed the rules governing the support available to victims of sex crimes, introducing a heavily criticised new regime that severely restricted access to counselling.
But what most concerned critics was an apparent similarity between a requirement in the new "clinical pathway", and a recommendation contained in research ACC had commissioned from a controversial senior academic. The research was led by Professor Felicity Goodyear-Smith, who has been a vocal detractor of the field of sexual abuse counselling and who, as the daughter-in-law of Centrepoint founder Bert Potter, has ongoing personal relationships with convicted child sex offenders.
During the eight months following the clinical pathway's introduction, ACC paid out $7 million less to 2889 fewer claimants than it had over the same period a year previous. Approved new claims, running at 1313 in the eight months prior to the pathway's introduction, subsequently dropped to 240 over the same length of time. Among the hundreds to have their claims denied were two women believed to have later committed suicide.
Despite a record $4.8 billion loss sustained by ACC the previous financial year, ACC Minister Nick Smith stressed the policy was not an attempt to cut costs, but was driven by a desire to implement best practice for sexual abuse victims, known as "sensitive claimants". Critics dubbed the new pathway a "rapists' charter".
The scheme's many detractors were primarily concerned by a new requirement that, before they could access ACC counselling and support, claimants had to be diagnosed formally with a mental injury as defined by the American Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM-IV). Whereas previously, ACC might have accepted a GP or counsellor's description of symptoms such as flashbacks, panic attacks or nightmares resulting from a sex crime, now a formal diagnosis of a mental illness such as post-traumatic stress disorder was needed.
It's unclear exactly why. Nowhere was a DSM-IV mental illness diagnosis specified in the so-called "Massey guidelines", the widely accepted 2008 best practice manual which ACC had commissioned from Massey University researchers, and which it cited as having guided the formulation of the pathway ...
Click here to read more.

© 2010 Fairfax New Zealand Ltd

8 comments:

  1. Well this really comes as no suprise to those of us aware of ACC's tactics and Goodyear-Smiths ideologies and research. I hear that ACC are now trying to blame Auckland Medical School for picking FGS to do the research they commissioned the University to do. Saying it is the Medical School they commissioned to do it, and not FGS. What a joke! Though I believe ACC and Auckland Medical School both have a case to answer for here.

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  2. Also don't GP's have a "duty to care"? I don't know how ya can live next door to a large scale drug operation and not notice there are drug parties and people (including kids) out of it?

    She was eating meals at the house for goodness sake and using the bathroom and laundry facilities. Did she not open the cupboard to get a plate and see the drugs that Bert didn't try to hide? Or be kept awake by the all night parties happening right next door? Or use the bathroom while people were using drugs in the house? YEAH RIGHT!!

    Medical Council need to wake up!! This crap reflects badly on the whole profession.

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  3. If you can stand to read it, John Potter's response: http://menz.org.nz/2010/the-sex-abuse-counselling-empire-strikes-back/

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  4. Sickening... just sickening.

    Although, reading one of the comments over at MENZ makes you wonder where they think the new clinical pathway came from, if not from FGS's work...

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  5. I laugh at the conflict of interest part in the comments on MENZ.

    The SST article is talking about FGS researching for sexual abuse counselling when she has an on-going association with the sexual offending community. That is appauling to all suvivors REGARDLESS of what any therapist, mental health professional or doctor thinks. It is not a conflict of interest for those therapists to speak for us. They are doing their job, advocating for and supporting us suvivors. I wish I could speak out publicly.

    Actually if it follows that the therapists are worried about their ACC funding drying up from the changes, then why are they speaking publicly now that ACC have reinstated 16 hours of therapy? Surely, that would be risking having their heads (and funding) chopped off? You would only do it if you were deeply concerned about the situation.

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  6. One of the comments on the MENZ site is typical of their thought processes -

    "To keep dredging up and labeling folks as per their long ago (decades) actions is despicable." Author: Skeptik

    Sooooo the sexual abuse of a child isn't despicable? And yeah, once you're convicted of sexually abusing children, you will always be convicted of sexually abusing children. That's why they call it a criminal record - it records your crimes.

    Must be annoying to have that little fact hanging over their heads. Mind you, it's easily dismissed, see http://www.theaucklander.co.nz/local/news/encounter-appointment-with-the-doctor/3908808/

    Mid-conversation, her husband, John Potter, walks in to tell his wife he's popping out, and kisses her on the cheek.

    HIS appearance brings us, perhaps inevitably, to another topic. John Potter is the son of Bert Potter, convicted sex offender and spiritual leader of Albany's controversial Centrepoint commune. Bert served a 9-year jail sentence in the 1990s for perjury, child sex and drugs charges.

    His son also spent time in prison for indecent assault of two underage girls at Centrepoint. He was about 20 at the time. It's time for more probing questions.

    Dr Goodyear-Smith cringes and rolls her eyes as if to say, "Do we have to?". Aloud, she says, "It's old history. I've talked about this so many times."


    I wonder how many times the victims had to talk about it before the nightmares, flashbacks, etc. stopped - if they did stop.

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  7. OK, I must resist commenting on the MENZ site... right??? It will bring nothing but grief and anger, because two such opposing viewpoints will never find a middle ground, or give an inch...

    But to equate stealing a bike as a child, to the act of a grown man sexually abusing a child, is beyond belief. There are some crimes that you should carry a life sentence for, sexual crimes against a child is one of them...

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  8. @castorgirl - I know what you mean! I've been resisting the temptation. It's not going to change the views of such a hard-line minority. Every issue has its extremists - and so far they've left my blog alone. But if they bring their misguided venom over here, we can assume they're up for a fight. ;)

    It's amazing how many visitors this blog has had in the last couple of days via the link on the MENZ site - I should be thanking them for the publicity! I hope the readers are learning lots. :)

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