Aug 08, 2025

Many aged care staff say they missed out on Aged Care Employee Day

Despite its good intentions, it appears that Aged Care Employee Day is beginning to spark frustration, division, and even resentment for a surprisingly large number of aged care employees across the country.

While the original intent is to thank the carers, lifestyle teams, nurses, kitchen staff, and support workers who keep aged care running, this year, a large percentage of the workforce reported feeling forgotten, undervalued, or left out altogether.

Across aged care worker forums, stories poured in. Some teams were treated to heartfelt recognition: handwritten notes, thoughtful gift bags, BBQs, morning teas and thank-you speeches. But these were the exceptions.

However, it appears that Aged Care Employee Day came and went for a very large number of staff with no acknowledgement at all.

Many staff described the silence from management as deafening – no email, no gesture, not even a mention. Some received leftover food from earlier shifts, while others were told of celebrations only after they’d passed.

Community care workers in particular reported near-total exclusion, reinforcing the divide between residential and community care teams.

The inconsistency is having a real and damaging impact. Rather than uplifting morale, the uneven nature of the day is causing a sense of bitterness and inequality, especially among night shift staff and those working off-site.

The overwhelming message from workers is clear: if you’re not going to celebrate everyone, don’t celebrate at all.

In a time when the sector is desperate to retain and attract a committed workforce, token gestures – or worse, total silence – do more harm than good. For some, the day is now a reminder of how undervalued they feel year-round.

And that raises a difficult question: Has Aged Care Employee Day had its day?

Perhaps, unless it’s treated with the same dignity and intention expected of those it aims to honour. True recognition doesn’t need to be grand. It just needs to be genuine and equitable.

As one sentiment echoed time and time again: “We don’t need gifts. We just want to be seen.”

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Every Aged Care Facility Should Be Playing Music To Their Residents

There is a well-documented connection between music and a person’s mood that goes way beyond the realms of simple entertainment. Whether it’s the haunting wail of a seasoned blues guitarist evoking a lifetime worth of heartbreak, or the uptempo sing-song appeal of an iconic pop-music single, there will always be a particular style or song... Read More

How The Beatles’ A Hard Day’s Night Made Pop Cinema History

Television regularly showed old black-and-white scenes of Beatlemania that, to a ten-year-old in the neon-lit 1980s, seemed like ancient history. I had no idea what I was in for. Read More

Labor Promises to Exempt Pensioners from Tax Policy

Promised changes in tax policy would suggest that the government was planning to axe payouts to non-tax paying investors. This means there would be an end to cash handouts to share investors. However, Bill Shorten announced yesterday that more than 300,000 pensioners will be exempt from this change. Under the “pensioner guarantee”, all older Australians... Read More
Advertisement
Exit mobile version