Jun 19, 2020

Grandchildren welcome back in aged care homes as states ease restrictions

 

There will be a sea of smiling faces across aged care homes in two Australian states as the easing of coronavirus restrictions will allow grandchildren to finally visit their grandparents in aged care facilities.

As of yesterday, nursing homes in Queensland are now able to allow residents to receive visits from two people at a time, including children who are under the age of 16 who have been banned from all aged care homes across the country for the last three months.

Time limits on visits to aged care homes have also been removed in Queensland and there are no restrictions in place regarding the number of visitors a resident can receive each day.

Residents are also permitted to leave their facilities for exercise, health appointments, and family gatherings with no more than 20 people.

However, groups of residents are not yet allowed to leave aged care facilities in groups for excursions.

Aged care facilities across Tasmania will also be welcoming children back into their homes as an announcement by Premier Peter Gutwein revealed that people under the age of 16 would also be allowed in aged care homes across the state from Monday 22 June 2020.

Tasmanian aged care residents will also be permitted to leave their facilities for trips with family and friends, while outside services such as hairdressers will be allowed back into nursing homes.

Unlike Queensland, Tasmanian nursing homes will remain limited in the number of visitors they allow per resident ( one visit per-day of up to two residents) and these visits will be limited to two hours.

Both Tasmanian and Queensland aged care homes will not be permitting any travellers into their homes if they have returned from overseas or interstate within the last 14 days, or anybody who has been in contact with people who are suspected to had had COVID-19 within 14 days.

Operators of aged care facilities in both states will still be screening all visitors before they are allowed inside the premises.

 

Photo Credit – iStock – grandriver

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Aged care CEO believes that government bonus has divided aged care workforce

  Australian aged care staff rejoiced when the Aged Care Retention Bonus Grant was first announced in late March, but as details began to emerge, happiness turned to anguish for those who were deemed ineligible to receive payment. Despite carrying the same level of risk as the ‘direct care’ staff who currently receive a retention... Read More

Wound care in the real world of aged care

With more and more wound care taking place in a community setting, we sit down with Jan Rice, a wound care expert, to find out more about effective wound management in the real world of aged care. Read More

7 Ways to Gather Customer Feedback

Customer feedback is more than measuring customer satisfaction, it’s vital for any organisation to improve and grow. But it’s not just getting customer feedback that makes a business better – it’s utilising it to it’s full potential. It’s one thing to simply know that there are things you can improve on, things you can change,... Read More
Advertisement
Exit mobile version