Australian doctors have called on health ministers across the country to quickly detail and act on proposed changes to the cosmetic surgery sector.

Under proposed reforms cosmetic practitioners could be banned from using patient testimonials, face minimum hygiene standards and be barred from calling themselves surgeons if they are not qualified.

Australian Medical Association (AMA) president Professor Steve Robson said governments needed to quickly and clearly specify who could call themselves a surgeon.

"Health ministers have finally seen the light and taken the action we've been calling for," Prof Robson said on Saturday.

Health ministers agreed to the proposed changes after they met on Friday, with federal minister Mark Butler looking to "rein in the cosmetic cowboys".

The AMA wants more detail around the proposals quickly, saying the devil is in the detail.

Prof Robson said Friday's agreement meant Queensland should rethink plans to allow patient testimonials in medical advertising.

Some cosmetic procedure practitioners are using social media to dodge a national ban on testimonials in medical advertising.

Other reforms proposed on Friday include ensuring those practising cosmetic procedures are qualified and patients are better informed of their rights and the risks.

"These cosmetic cowboys have been riding unchecked for years," Mr Butler said.

"(It is) an industry that has come to resemble the Wild West."

It follows a series of damning revelations into the industry in an independent report released on Thursday.

The inquiry from former Queensland Health Ombudsman Andrew Brown found unsafe practices, misleading advertising and a need for minimum standards on qualifications.

Any medical practitioner can perform invasive cosmetic surgery without appropriate training.

The Australasian Society of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons welcomed the proposed reforms and took a shot at the regulator for failing to act sooner.

"It's a sad day for healthcare in Australia when the elected representatives of the people have been forced to step in and do the job that the regulator has consistently failed to do," president Robert Sheen said.

The regulator, Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Authority, has been dogged by criticism that it has failed to act as it attempted to limit actions.

"The regulator has shown that this (proposed reform) is beyond the current leadership's ability and interest," Dr Sheen said.

In October, a joint investigation by Nine newspapers and the ABC into controversial cosmetic surgeons uncovered serious hygiene and safety breaches across various clinics.

This resulted in the Medical Board of Australia taking action against several practitioners.

© AAP 2022

Cosmetic surgeons could be banned from using patient testimonials, face minimum hygiene standards and be barred from calling themselves surgeons if they are not, under proposed reforms.

Health ministers across the country met on Friday, with federal minister Mark Butler looking to "rein in the cosmetic cowboys".

Other potential reforms also include ensuring those practising cosmetic procedures are qualified and patients are better inform of their rights and the risks.

"These cosmetic cowboys have been riding unchecked for years," Mr Butler said.

"(It is) an industry that has come to resemble the Wild West.

"Australians deserve to have confidence in the safety and quality of the cosmetic surgery industry and these changes will provide that."

It follows a series of damning revelations into the industry in an independent report released on Thursday.

The inquiry from former Queensland Health Ombudsman Andrew Brown found unsafe practices, misleading advertising and a need for minimum standards on qualifications.

Any medical practitioner can perform invasive cosmetic surgery without appropriate training.

The Australasian Society of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons welcomed the proposed reforms and took a shot at the regulator for failing to act sooner.

"It's a sad day for healthcare in Australia when the elected representatives of the people have been forced to step in and do the job that the regulator has consistently failed to do," president Dr Robert Sheen said.

The regulator, Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Authority, has been dogged by criticism that it has failed act as it attempted to limit actions.

"The regulator has shown that this (proposed reform) is beyond the current leadership's ability and interest," Dr Sheen said.

In October, a joint investigation by Nine newspapers and the ABC'into controversial cosmetic surgeons uncovered serious hygiene and safety breaches across various clinics.

This resulted in the Medical Board of Australia taking action against several practitioners.

© AAP 2022

Twenty years after 88 Australians were killed in the Bali Bombings, the brutal attack is still taking its toll.

October 12 marks two decades since multiple blasts ripped through the Sari Club and Paddy's Irish Bar in the Kuta nightclub precinct killing 202 in total.

Survivor Phil Britten was celebrating a grand final win with teammates from Perth's Kingsley Football Club.

Seven of his companions died and the former club captain, now 42, suffered burns to 60 per cent of his body.

"There's never closure when something like this happens to you or your family," he told AAP.

"People think 20 years on and everything's sorted but we have lost, just this year, one of our survivors from the Kingsley footy club to suicide and that was a reflection of things he couldn't break out of from 20 years ago."

Just last month, the shadow cast by the bombing deepened when Indonesian authorities revealed one of the men convicted over the attack would be released after serving half of his 20-year sentence for assembling the bombs.

Umar Patek, whose real name is Hisyam bin Ali Zein, is getting an early release for good behaviour as part of Indonesia's Independence Day celebrations.

"It's appalling and it's terrible timing and the Indonesian government should have been a bit more sensitive around the 20th anniversary," Mr Britten said.

"I just can't get my head around it, how someone can murder so many people and still have half of his sentence reduced."

Indonesian television aired footage of Patek saying he wanted to start a family and his wife describing him as a "romantic husband" who was "patient and loving".

"We've got 202 victims in the Bali bombing who don't get a second chance," Mr Britten said.

The Australian government later lodged an official complaint over the footage saying it was "deeply hurtful" to the victims.

The news about Patek came after dreams to set up a commemorative peace park on the site of the former Sari Club in time for the 20th anniversary were dashed.

"As one of the survivors and one of the people actively involved in trying to establish the peace park it's obviously upsetting and disturbing," Mr Britten said.

The Perth-based Bali Peace Park Association's plan for the contemplative garden had long been riven by tensions with the land owner over price.

The owner, Indonesian businessman Sukamto Tji, and his representatives had vacillated for years, at one point demanding the farcical sum of $20 million.

"It was not worth pursuing and paying an exorbitant fee. A lot of people just want to move on," Mr Britten, who was a peace park association board member, said.

After the association ended negotiations with the owner, the federal government pulled back $4.5 million in purchase funds first pledged in 2019.

The government had supported attempts to buy the land before the peace park association closed last December, a Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade spokesperson told AAP.

"The sale did not eventuate and the association has since terminated its interest in acquiring the land and no longer requires Australian government funds," they said.

"The Australian government carefully considered an alternative concept subsequently put forward for part of the site, and determined that it was not viable and did not have broad support among those directly impacted by the bombings."

In 2019, the offer was made for two lots on the 1500sq m site.

Initially, the owner had agreed to sell the front block where the Sari Club had stood, but then reneged. After reconsidering, he accepted the $4.5 million conditional on an additional $9 million in "compensation" for loss of income over the years.

The peace park association refused and the deal lapsed.

In late 2021, the landowner dropped the compensation fee but increased the price to $15 million for both lots. Alternatively, he offered 560 square metres for $4.5 million. It was a no-win situation.

"We gave up," said Keith Pearce, the former treasurer of the peace park association.

"We notified the government that we were no longer in the business of buying the Sari Club site."

It's understood the owner now plans to build a hotel on the land.

The collapse of the plans for the peace park dismayed survivors and family and friends of those killed.

NSW father Barry Wallace made the journey from Byron Bay to Bali each October, until the coronavirus pandemic halted overseas travel in 2020.

This year he will revisit the bombing site - now a makeshift carpark - to honour his precious daughter, Jodi, who died on her 30th birthday.

"I am extremely disappointed the park is not going ahead, though it has become a political football," he told AAP.

"I would think the Indonesian and Australian governments would be proud to be involved in a peace park.

"I'm very close to my daughter there but the music from the surrounding nightclubs plays at a thousand decibels."

Despite the passage of time, his grief has not subsided.

"But your thoughts aren't dominated by how they died. You think more of the happy times," he adds.

Nine members of Kathy Salvatori's family will also attend this year's anniversary in Bali.

Killed in the attack, 38-year-old Kathy left behind her husband, former Test rugby league player Craig, and two daughters, Olivia and Eliza, then aged nine and six.

Like all of her relatives, Kathy's mother, Sydneysider Barbara Hackett, is upset the park hasn't come to fruition.

"I thought it was going to be a beautiful thing. It was somewhere people could think about their loved ones without the hustle and bustle. I was full of hope that the park would be ready."

Another survivor of the bombings, NSW woman Hanabeth Luke, 42, also hoped for a place of peace and contemplation.

"It's profoundly disappointing that the site will not be used to remember the horrific event that happened there and the people who died," the married mother of two says.

"I was always very keen to support a peace park being built, a quiet garden where people can sit and remember those people they loved and lost."

Across the road from the former Sari Club site, in a busy intersection, lies a ground zero monument listing the names of the 202 who died. It's often filled with grinning tourists posing for photos.

"It is showy and open; it's not introspective, peaceful and calming," Ms Luke said.

The bombing survivors and families of those killed are still trying to process the trauma and get on with their lives.

A life member of the Kingsley club, Mr Pearce is now treasurer of the Bali Memorial Association which was set up in January to honour the seven members who were killed.

His son Duane was part of the team that travelled to Bali and survived. But, like everyone, he struggles with trauma.

Mr Pearce says there is survivor guilt.

"It's very difficult, when my boy survived. These boys were virtually in a war situation with no training."

Ms Luke became known as the 'Angel of Bali' after a photo of her helping a horrifically burnt man out of the Sari Club inferno was splashed across the world.

The man, Tom Singer, later died in hospital. Her boyfriend, Marc Gajardo, was killed instantly.

"Years later, I remembered how the photographer took Tom's weight off me and helped. It was a powerful picture."

It took years for Ms Luke to move on. She marked the 10th anniversary in 2012 by speaking at a commemoration in Bali and also released her book, Shock Waves: Finding Peace after the Bali Bomb.

Writing the book was cathartic, she said.

"I was able to go back and touch my grief and address (it) but also understand what it gave me.

"When you have a near-death experience, it holds life up in your face and shows you how precious it is.

"I was just determined that since I had survived, I would not waste that opportunity."

And she hasn't. The Southern Cross University lecturer and a keen surfer from Evans Head this year ran as an independent in the northern NSW federal seat of Page.

Her impetus was climate action after the electorate was deluged by flooding earlier this year and she found herself in a tinny rescuing people from their roofs.

Though unsuccessful, she says: "I do think that (Bali) experience gave me the courage to step into things that scared me."

Mr Britten, a married father of three, credits his wife, Rebecca, with helping him face his demons on his road to recovery.

Depressed and in excruciating pain, there were tough years. Once, he loathed his scars but now he wears them as a badge of honour.

"The memories, the nightmares haven't faded but we've learnt to cope with them," he said.

On the 10th anniversary of the Bali bombings, Mr Brittain published his book, Undefeated. He has also established martial arts centres and is a motivational speaker.

"That would never have happened if not for Bali. I speak about my journey after that night," he said.

"So, I remind myself how lucky I am every single day but the 20th anniversary is a significant marker and it blows my mind to think it's been that long."

The memorial garden at the Australian Consulate-General in Bali will be open to the public on October 12. The government is yet to disclose information about further commemorative ceremonies.

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© AAP 2022

Coach Trent Robinson says the Sydney Roosters' last back-to-back meetings with South Sydney can't teach them anything as they prepare to face their bitter rivals again in next week's elimination final.

With their 26-16 defeat of Souths on Friday's opening night at Allianz Stadium, the Roosters confirmed they would host the Rabbitohs next weekend in a similar turn of events to the final weeks of the 2019 season.

On that occasion, the Rabbitohs claimed victory over the Roosters in the last game before the finals series but it was to be the Tricolours' last loss of the year.

The Roosters thrashed South Sydney 30-6 in the qualifying final a week later and went on to hoist the premiership trophy for the second time in as many years.

This time around, it will be the Rabbitohs out for revenge but Robinson said his side would not become distracted by thoughts that South Sydney could turn the tables on 2019 and stage a comeback of their own.

"That's all in the past," he said.

"You create your future and we'll create ours next week and how we want to play."

The Roosters have their fast start to thank for Friday night's victory.

The hosts ran out to a 14-0 lead after 20 minutes but were outscored by the Rabbitohs across the remainder of the contest.

"There's some improvements to be had for us," Robinson said.

"I thought we were really good for the first half, clear how we wanted to play.

"We just lost our way. We didn't execute well enough when we had field position and it just ended up being a stop-start game."

Rabbitohs coach Ben Hornby, subbing in for Jason Demetriou (COVID-19), said he doubted the Rabbitohs would need any pep talks ahead of next week's rematch.

"Motivation is never going to be a problem in the finals," he said.

"It's a finals game, we want to do well. We started on this journey a long time ago and we want to finish it in the best possible way."

Demetriou will be released from COVID-19 isolation next week and Hornby said he would be drilling a simple message home.

"We've got to be better with our start," Hornby said.

"We've got to be clean with the ball and not give penalties away and we won't be in our end for the whole time."

© AAP 2022