@Telltails said:
Unfortunately mental health issues in society today especially with young men are a major issue and every club must have procedures in place that identifies and manages them. In view of what happened at our club two years ago I would expect that the clubs management and coaching staff would be well equipped and aware of what action should be taken, to identify and support any player who was showing symptoms. If this is not the case . then we should be suitably and harshly criticised. **If in fact the club has failed in its duty of care**, I would expect an internal review surely needs to be carried out, But all we get is silence. The new CEO needs to start speaking, and fast.
Another damaging media article about the club - someone needs to step up and take control.
Ah no we don't need to respond to this at all.
"If the club has failed in it's duty of care"; I can assure you that by NSW work regulations, they are obliged to follow the contract, pay for services, provide sick/holiday/long-service leave and cover work-related physical injuries.
It is not the responsibility of the club to address or fix or attenuate the mental health condition of an employee. No company in Australia has this requirement. Maybe if you are lucky, your company has a counselor or therapist on the books. If there has been some kind of accident, companies will often engage counselling for affected employees.
But the depressed state of one individual that might be somewhat related to footy, but also just as likely related to personal / genetic issues, no that is not our responsibility.
If you take the sympathetic glasses off, Sita could not cop being played out of position. Gee whiz, let's call for therapy for the 30-odd footballers who played out of position when Sheens was coach.
If this was a genuine article about mental health issues, they'd talk about Halatau's role as a mental health advocate, or perhaps look at other clubs like Cowboys who have had a far worse share of youth tragedy than we have.
No this story is only raised because it gives a little more juice to the Farah story, and as someone pointed out, Sita and Farah have the same scumbag agent.
All of you taking the Mosese situation and using that as pressure against the club, you should be ashamed. That was an absolute tragedy but not the fault or responsibility of the club, and they are not to be expected to knee-jerk to any potential mental health issues other players may or may not present.
I mean put yourself in the club's shoes - they knew Sita was doing it kind of tough and asked some of the players to keep an eye on him. Did Sita himself come to the club with a medical diagnosis of depression, seeking assistance? Did the club turn down or ignore professional advice that Sita was a self-harm risk?
No, there was a bloke doing it a bit tough, they informally wanted to check up on him. Unless you want the kid put in the spotlight, being sent to doctors and having formal checks, probably rested from playing until he has sorted out his troubles (in the manner of Buddy Franklin).
Some of you are such peanuts, your reaction to this story really gets up my nose. And I've dealt with persons with depression in my professional capacity, so I have a very good idea of what I am talking about.