"If we expect people to pay more [in the future], we have to deliver much better care" [Catholic Health Australia chief executive Pat Garcia quoted in The Sydney Morning Herald, 9 February 2020]
That may explain why few noticed or cared about the final sitting day in Canberra.
the scathing interim report from the Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety.
"inhumane, abusive and unjustified", the commissioners also commented on the lack of transparency in aged care, with the numbers of complaints, assaults and staff numbers all kept secret from the public.
and, boy, do we need more of this," said Senator Stirling Griff from Centre Alliance, who proposed the amendments.
For example, when the Queensland Government proposed laws requiring nursing homes to publish their staff numbers last year, the federal Department of Health sent a six-page document arguing against it, saying it might "confuse or mislead" families and "appears to create a reporting burden on providers with no clear benefits to consumers".
Read the full article here.
The Sydney Morning Herald, 9 February 2020:
...the federal Health Department revealed it was yet to implement key recommendations of the Australian Law Reform Commission's 2017 report on elder abuse.
Responding to a question taken on notice at a Senate estimates hearing, Health Department bureaucrats this week said a "scoping study" was being done on a register of aged care workers, while "preparatory work" was under way on a serious incident response scheme for assaults in care.
Labor's aged care spokeswoman, Julie Collins, said older Australians at risk of abuse deserved "immediate action, not years of inaction and delays".
Official data shows there were 5233 assaults in residential aged care facilities in 2018-19.
Catholic Health Australia outlined its proposed new means-testing rules in a pre-budget submission to the federal government.
There is a question begging to be answered here.