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July 3, 2022
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Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety

The market has failed aged care: study 

May 3, 2021 by Rayan Calimlim Leave a Comment

A University of Melbourne study into Australia’s aged care system has found that increased competition has not improved the quality of care received by residents.  

The study of aged care facilities around the country analysed data provided by the Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety from 2008-2020. The study found that the market had failed to improve the quality of care provided by aged care facilities, despite increased competition in some quarters. 

It also found that increased competition did not result in lower fees for aged care residents. 

The study also found that government-owned aged care facilities in most cases provided care of an equal or greater standard compared to private and not-for-profit facilities, despite lower fees. 

The authors – Dr Ou Yang, Associate Professor Jongsay Yong, Professor Yuting Zhang and Professor Anthony Scott – concluded that the lack of transparency and public reporting in the sector has led to the system’s failure to self-regulate. 

“As shown in our research, the sector hasn’t performed despite years of market-oriented reforms”, the authors indicated. 

“Two key sources of market failures, the lack of public reporting of quality of care and price transparency, should be addressed as policy priorities before competition can work in residential aged care markets.” 

The authors made a number of recommendations to fix the issues found in the report. These include price transparency, a system of public rating, and regular reporting of quality of care aiming at facilitating consumer choice. 

The NSW Nurses and Midwives’ Association, along with the Australian Nursing and Midwifery Federation, are campaigning for greater transparency within the aged care sector, in line with the recommendations of the Aged Care Royal Commission. You can support our campaign here. 

Aged Care Royal Commission report drops – but we won’t see it until next week

February 26, 2021 by Rayan Calimlim Leave a Comment

After more than two years of hearings, findings from the Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety were delivered today – but the public won’t see the final report until next week.

Commissioners Tony Pagone and Lynelle Briggs will deliver their long-awaited findings to the Governor-General today, but it won’t be made public until the Morrison Government tables it in parliament next week.

Although the government will receive a copy of the report today, Health Minister, Greg Hunt told reporters, “we will review it carefully over the weekend”.

“We will release the report and provide an interim response by the middle of next week”.

The report is anticipated to be over a thousand pages and include over a hundred recommendations.

The Commission heard evidence from health experts, consumer advocates, aged care residents and nurses working in the sector.

Through 99 days of formal hearings and 10,000 public submissions, it heard stories of severe understaffing and under-resourcing in the sector, leading to inadequate care.

The Commission’s interim report, released in October 2019 was titled “Neglect”, and provided some insight into the contents of the final report.

The NSW Nurses and Midwives’ Association is advocating for:

  • Legal minimum staffing and the right mix of skills
  • Transparency and accountability for government funding
  • Mandatory ongoing skills development, paid for by the employer (including infection control and ongoing professional development)
  • Government funding linked to direct care and staff wages

To sign up to the campaign, visit the website.

Aged care nurses highlight urgent need for safe staffing

February 11, 2021 by Rayan Calimlim 4 Comments

Aged care nurses and supporters gathered outside Member for McMahon, Chris Bowen’s office in south western Sydney to send a message to Canberra.

With the Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety due to hand down its final report by 26 February, members of the NSW Nurses and Midwives’ Association (NSWNMA) are calling on the Morrison Government, and all political parties, to act.

Over the coming weeks, aged care nurses from Broken Hill to the Blue Mountains, Byron Bay to Albury will highlight the need for staffing ratios and greater transparency of government funding.

The NSWNMA says the Morrison Government cannot continue to stall on its responsibility to urgently fix the aged care sector.

You can join the campaign to fix aged care here.

New aged care data on hospitalisation rates show significant problem areas in residential aged care

February 2, 2021 by Rayan Calimlim 1 Comment

The Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety released new data overnight comparing hospitalisation rates from residential aged care facilities.

The report found 36.9% of nursing home residents presented to an emergency department at least once in 2018-19.

It’s one of many research papers specifically commissioned and published to inform the Royal Commission, which will release its final report by February 26 this year.

The findings are a welcome addition to the dearth of information about the quality of aged care in Australia. It’s unacceptable that it’s taken a Royal Commission in 2021 to uncover simple information about hospitalisation rates.

The report highlights key metrics about the sector’s performance. It points to the next stages in the journey where information about the performance of individual residential aged care facilities is published, and where further investigation is undertaken locally about improving the interaction between residential aged care, general practice, and hospitals.

Aged care in Australia suffers the same accountability deficit as other aspects of human services, but that is slowly changing.

Last week the Productivity Commission released data comparing states on a range of indicators including availability of federal government funded aged care and consumer satisfaction with aged care services.

What the data can tell us

The report found about 3.4% of residents were admitted to hospital for a pressure injury, about 2% for weight loss, and 0.5% for an adverse medication event in the same time period. These rates are just the tip of the iceberg, as they represent those who were serious enough to be hospitalised and don’t include people who were treated in the nursing home and didn’t require hospital admission.

Importantly, the report says there are many facilities which are outliers on one or more of these measures. There are some facilities where the residents have significantly higher rates of hospital admissions for pressure injuries, weight loss, or adverse medication events than others. The report does not identify these but, in the medium term, the public has a right to know which residential aged care facilities are of concern and which are managing these quality risks well.

The report also found 10.5% of residents were admitted to hospital in 2018-19 because of a fall, up from 8.5% in 2014-15, and 5.4% for a fracture.

The data can’t tell us everything

But we need to be cautious about these findings. We cannot use the rate of falls and other injuries as the only indicator of quality care.

One way residential aged care facilities can minimise the risk of falls leading to hospitals admission is by better care and assessment of residents. And on the other hand, facilities should resist the urge to overreact by stripping residents of their autonomy and not letting them move around, nor letting them take any risks at all. Quality care also means treating residents with dignity.

The data also cannot answer the question of how many emergency department presentations could be avoided with better staffing, nor whether involvement of GPs, geriatricians or health outreach from the emergency department could’ve prevented any of these presentations.

Another risk of these data is they’re very health-oriented. The health sector, and especially hospitals, have lots of good data and so it’s easy to develop measures relating to hospitalisations. As good as the published data are, the risk is that decision-makers will focus on what’s measurable, rather than what’s important.

Reform in the aged care sector must have a rights basis, as we at the Grattan Institute pointed out in our 2020 report on rethinking aged care. The full range of residents’ rights needs to be promoted and protected.

More work needs to be done on measuring whether the rights of older Australians are being upheld alongside these hospital-oriented measures, and resident-relevant measures of quality including use of agency staff, staffing ratios, and dealing with individual preferences and differences.

What now? The public needs access to aged care facility performance

This report was prepared for the Royal Commission, so it mostly highlights issues and demonstrates what can be done. The next step is for the aged care regulator to pick up where the Royal Commission has left off.

In light of calls for increased transparency and accountability in aged care, the regulator should provide feedback to all nursing homes about where they stand on these metrics and then identify relative performance publicly.

Now these data have been collected and shown to be relevant, it’s now unethical for the regulator to withhold this information from the public, especially when the rhetoric about aged care is about promoting choice in a market where people choose their residential facility. Although providers are asked to report against quality standards to the regulator, very little of this information is passed on to the consumer.

The aged care regulator should set a target of publicising performance metrics for the December quarter 2021, and do so on an ongoing basis.

Performance metrics should also go beyond hospitalisation rates, and include information about staffing numbers and ratios as is done in the United States with its star rating system. They should also include the number of complaints and assaults — information which is currently unavailable to older Australians needing care.The Conversation

Stephen Duckett, Director, Health Program, Grattan Institute

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Royal Commission’s aged care report imminent

February 1, 2021 by Rayan Calimlim 1 Comment

The Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety is due to deliver its final report on the experiences of residents in the sector, the management of residential homes, and recommendations for reforms by 26 February.

The Lamp spoke to RN Angelin Maharaj  about her hopes for the sector in the wake of the commission.

The commission should mandate minimum staffing levels

A system that puts profits before residents’ needs has to change, says Angelin Maharaj.

During the COVID lockdowns of aged care homes, admissions and bed numbers at the large high-care nursing facility in western Sydney where RN Angelin Maharaj works dropped noticeably.

The facility’s operators seized the opportunity to reduce staff. “An order came in from head office to not replace the first three AiNs who might call in sick on any one day,” Angelin explains.

“We were not hiring any new staff, and if RNs were sick or on holidays, staff not working on the floor had to fill in. The ACFI [the Aged Care Funding Instrument] staff member, who is an RN, had to come onto the floor.

“Staff are burning out from overwork. If they call in and can’t be replaced, it then puts more pressure on everyone else. We have been seeing it even more during the pandemic.”

Over the seven years working at the 135-bed nursing home, Angelin has seen a steady decline in staff hours. She is hoping that the final report of the aged care royal commission will mandate minimum staffing levels.

Since she started work at the centre, Angelin says that the hours of the 20 AiNs on staff have been reduced, with five now working shifts just four hours long, even though the work has become more demanding.

Angelin has also seen more newly qualified RNs being thrown into specialist care environments without sufficient mentoring and training. “When I started, we employed many qualified RNs, year three and four and above, but more recently we are hiring all the new grads, and they have no knowledge of psychotropic medications or how to cater for all the dementia care and palliative care. We need to educate and mentor the new grads, but we don’t have the experienced RNs to do that.”

Angelin is hoping the royal commission will address staff qualifications levels, and mandate “qualified RNs in all facilities 24/7. I know there are some facilities that don’t have RNs on a nightshift. If RNs aren’t there, AiNs have to administer medication, which is dangerous when there is no-one there to oversee them.”

“We have to abandon the Aged Care Act 1997, which has allowed the needs of residents to come second to making a profit. I can see what the residents are paying now, and it is not reaching the floor. We are all going to be old one day. We all need to raise our voices to protect vulnerable residents.”

Older Australians deserve more than the aged care royal commission’s COVID-19 report delivers

October 12, 2020 by Rayan Calimlim Leave a Comment

Amid the ongoing disaster in Victorian aged-care homes, the Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety released its special report into the COVID-19 pandemic.

This report finally states who is responsible for aged care — the federal government — finding its actions were “insufficient” to ensure the aged-care sector was prepared for the pandemic.

But the report doesn’t offer us a clear picture of what went wrong and why.

Importantly, its recommendations largely fall short and come too late.

5 main recommendations that don’t go far enough

The report’s first key recommendation addresses the vexed issue of isolating residents from family and friends during lockdowns. The commissioners have asked the government to fund providers to ensure adequate staff are available to facilitate loved ones to visit.

This addresses the universally recognised need for a humane and proportionate response to lockdown, and the need to reduce the mental and physical harms associated with isolation.

But a better approach would be to introduce a mandatory code for visits to aged-care homes during COVID-19, rather than the voluntary code we currently have. We’d also need a way of enforcing this code, including a process to address family concerns immediately.

Second, the commission recommends the government create Medicare Benefits Schedule items to increase the provision of allied health services, including mental health services, to aged-care residents.

While this will assist to some degree, a better recommendation would be instituting structured rehabilitation plans for residents with support from care workers. This would ensure the allied health advice provided through these new Medicare items is followed.

This recommendation also fails to address the fact many allied health staff work across multiple services, which increases the risk of infection spread.

The third recommendation requires establishing a national aged-care plan for COVID-19, including setting up a national aged-care advisory body. This is the most obvious step in any emergency response.

The commission indicates the plan should establish protocols between the federal government and states and territories, which may reduce some confusion around who is responsible for what. The plan should also set up procedures regarding who decides whether residents with COVID-19 are transferred to hospital.

As part of the plan, significant outbreaks in facilities are to be investigated by an independent expert, and any lessons promptly disseminated to the sector.

But the commission doesn’t provide any detail on what constitutes an independent expert, a major oversight. Ideally, the experts shouldn’t be directly involved with government departments, the regulator or affiliated groups involved in the pandemic response.

Perhaps most disappointing is the commission did not highlight that multiple outbreaks in aged-care homes reflect systemic issues rather than individual organisational failures. The most useful information is obtained by investigating every aspect of the sector as a whole. This is a missed opportunity and does not serve the best interests of older Australians.

As for the advisory body, the commission was clear the group Prime Minister Scott Morrison established in August was not sufficient — it lacked the right skill mix and was temporary.

But it’s extremely disappointing the commission has not directed that senior nurses, family members and residents (ideally supported by human rights lawyers) be appointed to the group. The people who will be most affected by the decisions should be directly involved in making them.

The fourth recommendation stipulates all aged-care homes should have one or more trained infection control officers as a condition of accreditation.

The fifth is for governments to deploy accredited infection prevention and control experts into aged-care homes to provide training, and assist with preparing for and managing outbreaks.

These are sound recommendations, but should have been in place more than a decade ago, had we learnt from Hong Kong’s experience with SARS.

The challenges with implementing these recommendations will be having the human resources for such a workforce, including addressing the longstanding issue of health professionals’ willingness to work in regional and remote areas.

Some key omissions

The report’s recommendations are worthwhile, yet all are late in arriving and incomplete. Each recommendation provides a solution to an entirely foreseeable problem.

Notably, there’s an absence of strategies to address the known structural problems in aged care. These are issues the commission itself has previously described, around workforce limitations, widespread neglect of residents, and regulatory failures. They represent barriers to implementing the recommendations.

The commissioners also fell into the trap of inappropriate comparisons. References to Australia faring better than selected European and North American countries fail to acknowledge our advantages of being an island continent with lower community transmission and an extra three months to prepare. This provides false reassurance to the public.

We should judge our performance on the disparity between what we could have done and what we did do, rather than against countries in different situations.

There’s more to uncover

It’s not surprising the government has accepted all the recommendations, as each of these initiatives should have already been in place well before the second wave hit Victoria.

The commission has recommended the federal government report on the implementation of these recommendations no later than December 1.

Ultimately, this report was not designed, nor did it deliver, an understanding of what went wrong in aged care, and why.

Similarly, the recommendations do not go to the heart of the information gleaned from the appalling and tragic lived experiences of residents, families, aged-care workers and health professionals.

With so many outbreaks, many still ongoing, and tragically, several hundred deaths in aged care already, there remains much we need to uncover.The Conversation

Joseph Ibrahim, Professor, Health Law and Ageing Research Unit, Department of Forensic Medicine, Monash University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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