The Australian Nursing and Midwifery Federation (ANMF) has criticised last night’s budget stating the lack of sustainable funding and real reform for health and aged care. This shows that Prime Minister Scott Morrison has failed to ‘do his job’ to restore and rebuild Australia’s public health system and the private aged care sector.
“Yet again, Mr Morrison has failed to do his job. We’re disappointed that the Budget has let down our critical health and aged workforce.” says ANMF Federal Secretary Annie Butler.
Despite repeated calls from the sector the government has given no indication in the budget that they are willing to increase aged care workers pay, instead opting for modest funding for some preventative health initiatives and increased paid parental leave (PPL) provisions.
“We all know that the failures in care for the elderly are not one-off, exceptional or occasional – they are widespread. We have all seen the heart breaking consequences of the Government’s continued inaction – it simply must not continue.” says ANMF Federal Secretary Annie Butler.
The Aged Care Royal Commission report last year, warned the aged care sector was suffering due to a chronic worker shortage and that those working in the sector were underpaid and undervalued.
Despite being warned about chronic staffing shortages, and in light of the devastating impact of COVID on the sector, this budget from the Morrison Government was more interested in ‘playing politics’ than fixing aged care. One year into the Government’s five-year ‘reform program’, nothing has improved, in fact the situation according to the ANMF “has only become worse.”
As ANMF Federal Secretary Annie Butler put it “The Government cannot ignore the plight of nursing home residents, nurses and care workers, by failing to implement the Royal Commission’s key recommendations – safe minimum staffing levels, increased wages for aged care workers and genuine accountability for taxpayers’ money.
“We ask Mr Morrison, how many preventable deaths do there need to be and how many dedicated nurses or aged care workers need to be driven from their jobs before he finally fixes chronic staffing shortages, causing so much pain and suffering in the country’s nursing homes?”
The ANMF is demanding real reform for health and aged care, calling on the Opposition, the Greens and Independents to work with stakeholders and commit to: an increase in funding for public health and maternity systems; fund and legislate mandated staffing ratios in private aged care; improve wages and conditions for the depleted aged care workforce; legislate clear transparency measures to ensure that taxpayer-funds for aged care providers are tied-to direct care; provide equal rights for working women, starting with eradicating the gender pay and superannuation gap and address the health impacts of the climate crisis in Australia and the Pacific Region.