Unborn baby dies after heavily pregnant mum was forced to wait 16 hours for emergency surgery in Sydney after being turned away at the Queensland border

  • Heavily pregnant mother had to wait 16 hours for emergency surgery in Sydney
  • Mother from town of Ballina in NSW - 30km away from the Queensland border 
  • Her twins were just 24 weeks along and they had needed urgent medical care
  • Baby's grandfather said the family was distraught and called for border changes 
  • Queensland premier slammed for saying state's hospitals 'for our people only' 

A heavily pregnant mother who was forced to wait 16 hours for emergency surgery in Sydney after being turned away at the Queensland border has lost one of her unborn twin babies.

Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk was slammed for saying the state's hospitals were 'for our people only' - rejecting the seriously ill mum-to-be's exemption despite her needing emergency surgery for the unborn twins.

The mother, from Ballina in New South Wales which is just 30km from the Queensland border, had twins who were just 24 weeks along and needed urgent care. 

The grandfather of the baby Allan Watt said his family was extremely upset by the loss and called for changes to border exemption rules.

A heavily pregnant mother in NSW who was turned away from the Queensland border has lost one of her unborn twins (stock image)

A heavily pregnant mother in NSW who was turned away from the Queensland border has lost one of her unborn twins (stock image)

Motorists are seen approaching a checkpoint at Coolangatta on the Queensland-New South Wales border earlier this month

Motorists are seen approaching a checkpoint at Coolangatta on the Queensland-New South Wales border earlier this month

'I feel something needs to be done... If I could do anything to help anyone else to make sure this doesn’t happen again,' he told the Courier-Mail

Ms Palaszczuk had said last week while she was not aware of the specifics of the case, the decision about who to let into Queensland would be made by health professionals, not politicians.

'People living in NSW have NSW hospitals. In Queensland, we have Queensland hospitals for our people,' she said.

Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton on Friday hit out at Ms Palaszczuk for her 'preposterous' comments.

'Her saying that Queensland hospitals were only for Queenslanders is complete nonsense and it needs to stop,' he said.

'I think people need to mark her down for playing politics.'

NSW Health Minister Brad Hazzard meanwhile called her comments 'astonishing'.

He urged her to  review her border arrangements to 'ensure patients receive the health care they need'. 

He said there were patients in northern NSW in need of renal transplants who were being denied access to the Princess Alexandra Hospital in Brisbane. 

Those patients were being forced to drive themselves '12 or more hours to Royal Prince Alfred Hospital in Sydney', he said.   

Mr Watt previously told 9News the unborn twins needed the emergency treatment after being diagnosed with a rare illness at just 24 weeks old. 

'The Queensland government is treating people that are in dire need like they are lepers,' he said.  

Another young mother was also left heartbroken as she was separated from her newborn son due to the draconian border restrictions. 

Motorists are stopped at a checkpoint at Coolangatta on the Queensland-New South Wales border earlier this month

Motorists are stopped at a checkpoint at Coolangatta on the Queensland-New South Wales border earlier this month

Chantelle Northfield, from Casino in northern New South Wales, welcomed her second son Harvey at nearby Lismore Base Hospital last Friday.

Little Harvey had difficulty breathing and was airlifted to Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital for lifesaving treatment.

But his terrified mother was unable to be at her newborn's bedside as she would need to quarantine for 14 days first.

'Due to the coronavirus pandemic and the closure of the Queensland border, Glen and I were refused entry to the hospital until after 14 days mandatory quarantine in a hotel,' Ms Northfield wrote in a gut-wrenching Facebook post.

More to come 

Baby dies after mum forced to wait for surgery after being turned away from Queensland border 

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