Sep 28, 2020

Emergency leave for aged care residents extended to June 2021

 

The government has extended the time a resident can move out of an aged care facility without penalty during COVID-19.

Many families have made the decision to take their loved ones out of residential aged care during the pandemic due to the alarmingly high rates of infection occurring in these homes.

More than 2,000 aged care residents have contracted COVID-19, and 654 residents have tragically died.

In normal circumstances, aged care residents are only entitled to be away from their aged care residence for up to 52 days a year for ‘non-hospital’ reasons. This type of leave is known as ‘social leave’.

If a resident takes more than 52 days social leave, the government does not provide the resident’s subsidy to the aged care home for that person for the additional days.

The provider can then pass the cost of the government subsidy on to the resident. The government’s emergency leave arrangements prevent residents being charged for the additional days.

Emergency leave was first implemented in May, and was due to finish at the end of this month, but this morning the government has announced it will be extended until 30 June 2021.

CHSP emergency support available at home 

Minister for Aged Care and Senior Australians, Richard Colbeck, said, “Many permanent residential aged care residents want to temporarily relocate with family to reduce their risk of exposure to COVID-19, and the Australian Government supports that choice where appropriate.”

“By introducing this arrangement, we are giving senior Australians the option of staying with family for the duration of the emergency, without the extra worry about using or exhausting their normal social leave entitlements.”

For aged care residents who do choose to take emergency leave, emergency support at home is available through the Commonwealth Home Support Programme (CHSP), which can provide personal care, nursing services meals, social support, allied health and therapy services, unaccompanied grocery shopping and transport.

 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

COVID vaccine consent for aged-care residents: it’s ethically tricky, but there are ways to get it right

The first groups to receive the jab will be quarantine and border workers, frontline health-care workers, aged-care and disability-care workers, and aged-care and disability-care residents. For aged-care residents, their age, health and living situation makes them especially susceptible to becoming very sick or dying from COVID-19. So it’s right they are receiving priority access to a vaccine. Read More

Pandemic a chance to create closer ties with distant grandchildren

For many years we have been distant grandparents to four of our six young grandchildren. Distant geographically, that is, as we love all of them to bits and happily it’s mutual. So we have always made a big effort to make sure that we get to be with our more remote ones as much as... Read More

This is why aged care workers should not fear the COVID-19 vaccine

  Australians will begin receiving COVID-19 vaccinations in a matter of weeks, however some key recipients of the vaccine – aged care workers – are nervous about the new drug, fearing it hasn’t been tested properly in the rush to stamp out the virus as it rages across the world, killing almost 2 million. HelloCare’s... Read More
Advertisement