May 06, 2019

Dementia residents suffer under poor staffing numbers

Low ratios of nursing staff in residential aged care facilities is taking a toll on the care provided to residents living with dementia, according to a report released by the NSW Nurses and Midwives’ Association (NSWNMA) today.

The report ‘Who Cares? Dementia Care in NSW Residential Aged Care Facilities’ highlights the importance of safe staffing and skills mix, with 82% of those surveyed stating insufficient staffing ratios within residential aged care facilities increased the risk of abuse.

General Secretary of the NSWNMA, Brett Holmes, said the report revealed many aged care residents diagnosed with dementia had not received the level of care they deserved because staffing was so poor.

“Many of our members working in rural, not-for-profit facilities are worried about the management of residents with behavioural and psychological symptoms of dementia or BPSD,” Mr Holmes said.

“Often these are large sites, with a staffing ratio of just one registered nurse to between 50 and 100 residents. Nurses working in these conditions are therefore reporting higher incidences of missed care or the use of restrictive practices.

“Incidences of aggression between residents or residents towards staff, is also higher in facilities with low nursing staff to resident ratios.”

Mr Holmes said the report found 73% of members surveyed had insufficient time to interact with a resident who was displaying signs of loneliness. Meanwhile, 89% of respondents indicated additional staff would help to improve interactions and 69% said an improved skill mix amongst nursing staff would also assist.

“Not only are some of our residential aged care facilities failing to provide adequate dementia care, many are contributing to the prevalence and symptoms because appropriate nurse staffing is inadequate,” said Mr Holmes.

The NSWNMA is calling for urgent minimum staff to resident ratios to be introduced in the aged care sector and is part of a national campaign seeking support for ratios ahead of the federal election on 18 May www.ratiosforagedcare.com.au.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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

  1. One RN to 50 residents? How many assistant nurses, Physios, activities officers etc are not included in the study?
    Stop exaggerating this nonsense and do some real studies!

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Government funding for aged care must be tied to care outcomes, experts say

This week there has been an unprecedented level of attention on the aged care sector after the Government called for a Royal Commission to address quality concerns, and amid harrowing revelations by Four Corners. Last night, the ABC’s ‘Matter of Fact’ continued the focus on the sector, speaking to three industry leaders, Annie Butler Federal Secretary... Read More

The plan to get young people out of aged care: “They should be living with the choice and dignity we all deserve”

The federal government is increasing its efforts to move younger people from residential aged care with a $10.1 million investment to provide age-appropriate accommodation and support. Read More

Almost half of site audits reveal failure to comply with quality standards

Nearly half of all aged care ‘site audits’ in the final quarter of 2019  found at least one of the new quality standards was ‘not met’, according to new data released by the Aged Care Quality and Safety Commission. Of the 173 site audits conducted between October and December 2019, 45 per cent identified a... Read More
Advertisement
Exit mobile version