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Friday, December 1, 2023

ANMF says opposition’s aged care reform package gives older Australians hope

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The Australian Nursing and Midwifery Federation (ANMF) says Opposition Leader Anthony Albanese’s pledge to mandate staffing ratios by introducing, in law, minimum care hours requirements for nursing homes and to fund real wage increases for all aged care workers, could finally bring hope to exhausted nurses and care workers in the troubled aged care sector.

With a delegation of 10 ANMF aged care members watching-on in Federal Parliament last night, Albanese announced that, if elected, the ALP would implement the critical recommendations of the Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety, including mandated standards for nutrition in nursing homes.

Nurses’ and care-workers’ experiences over the last few months have left them feeling abandoned, helpless and vulnerable – and utterly hopeless.They have felt that no-one will ever fix aged care. Tonight nurses and care-workers have finally been given a sense of hope.

ANMF federal secretary, Annie Butler

The measures the Opposition says it will implement if elected include:

  • 24 hour registered nurse care in every nursing home;
  • A mandated minimum 215 minutes of care per resident per day;
  • Funding real wage increases for aged care workers;
  • Ensuring accountability across the sector.

“After years of inaction, we may finally have a plan to fix the core problems underlining the crisis in aged care,” ANMF federal secretary, Annie Butler, said last night.

“We have known what the real problems in aged care are for years, but despite dozens of reports, inquiries, investigations and even a royal commission all saying the same thing, no one as been prepared to address these core problems.

“Tonight, we have just heard promise of a Government that, if elected, might actually take the genuine action needed.

Butler decried that the Morrison Government was given a road map for reform more than a year ago by its own royal commission, but failed to act on the Commission’s critical recommendations.

“Instead of overseeing desperately needed improvements, in the year that has elapsed, the Government has overseen a deepening crisis across the sector,” she said.

“Our members have given us heart breaking accounts of the consequences of the Government’s inaction.

“These are dedicated aged care workers, who have not only suffered the disappointment of seeing nothing change in the last year but who have had to cope with the aftermath of the Government’s insistence that the ‘country must open up’ and ‘live with COVID’; who have had to bear witness to the devastation this strategy has caused in aged care.

Butler said many in the industry are completely demoralised.

“Nurses’ and care-workers’ experiences over the last few months have left them feeling abandoned, helpless and vulnerable – and utterly hopeless,” she said.

“They have felt that no-one will ever fix aged care.

“Tonight nurses and care-workers have finally been given a sense of hope.

“That a Labor Government might finally treat them, and the older Australians in their care, with the dignity and respect they deserve.

“Hope that, with enough time to care, nurses and care workers, who love their job but have become so stressed and worn-out because of staff shortages, can go home after their shift, feeling proud and satisfied with what they’ve done for every older Australian.”

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