Feb 14, 2018

Australian Aged Care Leader Reflects On Industry at Global Conference

Braemar CEO Wayne Belcher spoke last week at the GCIC 2018 Conference on Integrated Care in Singapore. His topic explored where the Australian aged care industry may go next in its clinical governance responsibilities; twenty years on from the introduction of the Aged Care Act in 1997.

His presentation followed a detailed essay penned by Mr. Belcher which aims to delve into issues facing the industry over the decades, while presenting a series of observations on how the industry is faring in today’s climate.

“I have strived to describe the history of residential aged care in Australia and show how economic drivers that largely determine the funding of care may also be diminishing the clinical appropriateness of car,” comments Mr. Belcher, who was awarded a Medallion of the Order of Australia in 2007 in recognition to his work in Australia’s aged care industry.

“This can place care recipients, providers, and program funders alike potentially at risk of failure of service in financially constrained times. The move towards more effective management of financial resources by adopting an integrated health care approach to service provision can only be achieved if within that range of integrated services there is recognition of a clinical governance system that supports service providers.”

Mr Belcher argues that such clinical governance systems need to be understood by, and easily translated across, the range of providers so that all stakeholders can be clear about the scope of practice able to be provided in each service program.

“With respect to residential aged care in Australia, the aged care quality and accreditation system that underpins the service regime, in my view, is lacking that transferability and clarity,” he continues.

“Some fifty per cent of facilities struggle to meet the financial stability required to ensure long term viability of services, and the ability, or willingness, of providers to ensure that the most appropriately qualified providers of clinical services required in those residential aged care facilities are consistently on staff, is compromised. Therefore, in my view, the clinical governance systems in residential aged care in Australia are lacking.”

Mr Belcher argues that this is also the likely outcome in many community aged care services.

“These deficits are not irreparable, but it will take a willing Commonwealth Government to effect appropriate changes to ensure such clinical staffing mix is regulated, therefore providing some immediate improvement in clinical governance capability.”

 What do you have to say? Comment, share and like below.

Leave a Reply

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

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Tens of thousands of residents in lockdown as 500 aged care homes battle outbreaks

The vaccine ‘strollout’, staff shortages and the governments’ “let it rip” approach to the latest outbreak are putting immense pressure on aged care – again – as positive case numbers rocket from 100 to more than 3,000 in a matter of weeks. Read More

‘Prehabilitation’ boosts recovery for older surgery patients

Older adults about to undergo elective surgery should undertake a sustained programme of targeted exercise beforehand, new research suggests. Read More

Five staff rostered for 100 residents, royal commission hears

Royal commission hearings into the aged care workforce continued on Wednesday, with witnesses describing alarmingly low staff numbers at a major provider, aged care staff as the “working poor”, and the acceptance of violence in the workplace as something staff had to “accept”. Paul Gilbert, assistant secretary of the Victorian branch of the Australian Nurses and... Read More
Advertisement
Exit mobile version