Apr 06, 2018

“Please Stop Elder Neglect”: Nurses Union

Politicians need to stop talking and act on aged care neglect in Australia.

Every day, elderly Australians experience unnecessary pain, suffering and premature death in aged care facilities nation-wide.

A complete lack of Federal laws means aged care providers can staff facilities however they choose.

As a result, the majority of Australia’s 2400-plus privately run aged care facilities are chronically understaffed. In fact, it is not uncommon or illegal for one nurse to be left with up to 200 residents at a time.

This means elderly Australians who have lived long, productive lives do not receive the care, food, fluids, medication or assistance they require. It means elderly Australians fall unnecessarily, experience pain unnecessarily and die before their time.

This will likely occur today, tomorrow and every day until Australian politicians – from all sides of politics – act on the issue. With the introduction of Federal legislation that make safe staff levels law in all aged care facilities. Like the laws that exist in child care facilities, schools, learn to swim centres and pretty much every other workplace and facility in the country.

In recent days, in response to ongoing media scrutiny of aged care, politicians like Liberal Minister for Aged Care Ken Wyatt have distributed media releases with titles such as Aged Care Quality and Safety Comes First. Sadly, it does not.

It is increasingly clear that despite numerous aged care reviews, and media releases from the Turnbull Government and the opposition, aged care quality and safety does not come first in this country. Not even close.

The lack of laws and regulation in aged care means older Australians are being treated as second class citizens. They are simply not getting the care they deserve or need.

And while they suffer, the talk and media releases continue. Neither the Turnbull Government or the Federal ALP have committed to introducing laws that would force aged care providers to safely staff their facilities. That needs to change – now. Queensland and Australian nurses and midwives will continue to campaign on this issue http://anmf.org.au/campaign/entry/ratios-for-aged-care.

Right now, these facilities are not required to have even a single Registered Nurse on site. Access to doctors is extremely limited and Personal Carers hired to be on site can legally have little or no experience.

In addition, it is important the Australian public know that these facilities recently received more than $16 billion in taxpayer funds. These providers also reported more than $1 billion in collective profits. And all this atop the around 80 per cent of resident pensions, or up to $800, they receive per bed, per fortnight.

Aged care providers can afford to pay for staff – they just need to be held to account.

The time for talking has long passed. I urge any politicians who genuinely care to act.

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

Quality in Aged Care – Lessons from Health Sector and Preparing for New Quality Standards

Following a series of high profile compliance failures and reports of elder abuse in aged care facilities, further perpetuating a negative perception of the sector, pressure on providers to deliver high quality services is greater than ever. This is exacerbated by the implementation of the Royal Commission into Aged Care which promises further negative press as it... Read More

Why I no longer think we can eliminate COVID – public health expert

In an ideal world, completely eliminating COVID-19 is what all countries would aim to do, but the pandemic has evolved and Australia’s current strategy is starting to make less sense. Read More

Quality is in the Eye of the Beholder

Quality in aged care is the topic on everyone’s minds. With the on-going Senate Inquiry the release of the Carnell/Paterson Review and the move towards a single aged care quality framework, the way the sector thinks about and delivers quality services is evolving. With increasing consumer choice driving quality and innovation, providers need to understand customer expectations of quality... Read More
Advertisement
Exit mobile version