May 03, 2018

Nursing home ratings – is it good enough for mum or dad?

When considering an aged care home for your friends or family, what is important to you?

Are you interested in finding out about the rates of malnutrition, pressure sores, and use of physical restraint?

Or are you more interested in finding out how caring the staff are, cleanliness, or about the quality of the food?

Whatever the case, there is very little data available to enable good comparisons of Australia’s nursing homes.

With only one per cent of nursing homes failing to meet their accreditation standards last year – it would appear that government standards are being met.

However, the ABC has obtained access to a Victorian government manual for aged aged care managers that reveals a far more worrying picture of those in aged care facilities.

The report provides statistics for the extent of dangerous conditions for those in aged residential care:

  • Pressure sores in up to 42 per cent of all residents
  • Malnutrition ranged from 40 to 70 per cent
  • Use of physical restraint occurred for between 12 to 49 per cent of residents
  • Up to 50 per cent of residents fall every year
  • And those prescribed more than nine medication ranged from 13 to 75 per cent

Last year, the Review of National Aged Care Quality Regulatory Processes concluded, “The absence of reliable, comparable information about care quality in residential aged care is a striking feature of the current system.”

The government is taking steps to address the shortage of reliable information, with the introduction of a voluntary program for nursing homes to collect data.

The information gathered will be published on the government’s My Aged Care website, giving the public the opportunity to compare nursing homes.

But at this stage, only 230 of Australia’s 2,677 nursing homes have participated, according to the ABC, meaning the data gathered so far is insufficient to provide meaningful comparisons.

Last year’s review proposed that participation in the information gathering program should be made compulsory.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Torn apart: When married couples can’t live together in aged care

Should nursing homes give priority to residents who can afford to pay for aged care, even if it means frail and elderly couples are separated? A perth nursing home is refusing to grant an 87 year old man a bed in the home where his wife of 68 years lives because the home is giving... Read More

What is the most complained about aspect of aged care?

For years medication management has been the biggest gripe of aged care consumers, but now staffing numbers and staff adequacy has taken over the spot as the number-one-most -complained-about issue in aged care. Read More

Cameras in aged care: “Would you want your mother and father to be filmed in their bedroom?”

Installing cameras in the bedrooms of aged care residents might catch some cases of abuse, but what would the cost be? If we are to truly respect the autonomy and dignity of older people, surely we should allow them the “last bastion of privacy” – the bedroom. Mounting pressure to instal cameras in aged care... Read More
Advertisement