Sep 29, 2021

35 staff suspended, resigned or on stress leave amid bullying at Adelaide aged care home

Nurses having discussion

A number of aged care staff told The Advertiser they are concerned about continuing to work or returning to work amid a “mass exodus” of employees who have either been suspended from work or are on stress leave.

Over the last six months, more than 35 staff have left the aged care home because they are on stress leave, or they have been suspended or resigned.

Current and former employees told The Advertiser a “toxic” work culture is to blame.

Four staff members – two carers and two registered nurses – were suspended without being given a reason, according to a former staff member. They were informed of their suspension only half an hour before they were due to start work.

“I know for a fact I did not do anything that would’ve resulted in an incident half an hour before my shift,” she told The Advertiser.

“Everyone speaks highly of me, the residents love me and I will always advocate for my residents no matter what,” she said.

One of the affected staff told The Advertiser they had “never been this anxious” and they intend to lodge a complaint with the Fair Work Commission.

Another staff member who recently resigned, said the residents are suffering.

The residents “don’t know who’s coming in next”, she said. “Ultimately, they are the ones impacted.”

They added, “We’re short-staffed all the time, they’re not replacing staff … it’s just a mess.”

One member of staff told The Advertiser that the stress of working at the home was making them physically sick.

SA United Workers Union public sector coordinator, Paul Blackmore, said, “Older Australians are not getting the safety or the care they deserve.”

A spokesperson for the local healthcare network, SA Health Barossa Hills Fleurieu Local Health Network, said recruitment and retention in regional healthcare facilities is a challenge right across Australia.

Furthermore, 10 staff at the home were suspended last week after they failed to meet South Australia’s COVID-19 vaccination deadlines for aged care workers.

The home also failed a compliance assessment in July, when failures in personal care, clinical care, services and support for daily living, and organisational governance were identified.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  1. I worked at a NSW aged care residence as Pastoral Carer. I was 79 at the time. My daughter had been a resident there and I was approached by the then CEO to fill this position. The next ceo had no respect for me and forced my resignation as she did many other staff

  2. They failed a compliance assessment.
    Says it all. Guess they can manage without the staff . Good luck to the staff.
    Class action lawsuit

  3. Unfortunately this home was also sanctioned in 2017, for the same problems.
    One hopes the owners FINALLY realise they need to keep up the standards once they attain them again!

  4. Please name the aged care place. I have returned from NSW Aged Care Sector and I am starting to apply for Aged Care positions. I do not want to support this provider, it sounds horrific. I cry for the Elders 😢😔

  5. I worked for 6 years in a catholic aged care in Newcastle. The manager I believe was the leader of the pack supporting revolting, bullying behaviour. I was a target and congratulations she and her pack put me thru hell. I’m a feminist and the pack challenged every bit of my Feminist beliefs.
    When you are the packs target they are relentless.
    I reported a woman I was working with on Night Duty for striking a resident. It was relentless and did it escalate. She was lazy, sloppy, mean, impatient but the leaders of the pack and the pack lived her. No where to go

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

“It might sound like a lot, but it’s not”: What aged care can expect from the federal government’s May budget

With the 2021 May budget just around the corner, sources have leaked that around $10 billion will be promised as part of the federal government’s response to the aged care royal commission. However, some experts believe that this doesn’t even begin to scratch the surface of what is needed. Read More

95-year-old resident dies after being tasered, officer charged

A 95-year-old aged care resident with dementia who was tasered by police last Wednesday has died just an hour after the alleged offending officer was charged. Read More

Labor’s pledge to properly pay women and care workers is a start – but it won’t be easy

Read More
Advertisement