Media Releases

Consumer groups outline 10 key points for the future of aged care in Australia

23 September 2020

An alliance of aged care consumer and carer groups today outlined their shared vision for aged care. It comes at a time when the aged care system has never been under such intense scrutiny and pressure. Failures have been exposed during the COVID-19 pandemic and through the Aged Care Royal Commission, which this week concluded […]

An alliance of aged care consumer and carer groups today outlined their shared vision for aged care.

It comes at a time when the aged care system has never been under such intense scrutiny and pressure. Failures have been exposed during the COVID-19 pandemic and through the Aged Care Royal Commission, which this week concluded its last scheduled hearings.

The alliance includes Carers Australia, COTA Australia, Dementia Australia, the Federation of Ethnic Communities Council of Australia, National Seniors Australia and the Older Persons Advocacy Network.

The 10 shared principles will help all older Australians get the support they choose, when and where they need it and be treated with dignity and respect, by an aged care workforce that is trained and equipped to provide the standard of care older Australians and their families expect and deserve.

The full statement is available overleaf and can be summarised as including:

  1. A better Aged Care Act.
  2. A simple system where care is guaranteed within 30 days.
  3. Full transparency and easy to understand indicators to help inform consumer choice.
  4. A trained, registered and qualified workforce.
  5. Proper recognition and support for the role of unpaid family/friend carers.
  6. Easy to understand information and local solutions.
  7. A strongly resourced regulator that takes robust action to ensure consumer protections.
  8. Services that are inclusive, culturally safe and sensitive.
  9. A funding model that ensures sufficient taxpayer funding, control by consumers over their funding, independent pricing and transparency in how funds are spent.
  10. Better integration of other health and wellbeing services with aged care.

 

FOR MEDIA INQUIRIES INFORMATION PLEASE CONTACT:

  • Carers Australia –Samara McCann 02 6122 9917 or 0428 948 415
  • COTA Australia – Jenny Stokes 0478 504 280
  • Dementia Australia – Christine Bolt 0400 004 553
  • Federation of Ethnic Communities Council of Australia – Lynne Minion 0401 125 370
  • National Seniors – Craig Sullivan 02 6133 7915 or 0488 047 380
  • Older Persons Advocacy Network – Afsah Haque- 0410 860 435

 

Quotes attributable to:

Carers Australia CEO Liz Callaghan

“The Aged Care Royal Commission has rightly shone a light on issues that matter to the community, including family and friend carers. Future reform must address these ten points in order to meet community expectations and deliver on quality of care.”

(Council on the Ageing) COTA Australia Chief Executive Ian Yates AM

“It’s time to overhaul a system that puts the needs of providers and bureaucracy above the human needs of every older Australian. Structurally, culturally and legislatively we have the opportunity to rebuild our aged care system so that it places the needs and preferences of consumers at its very centre. Older Australians must have both choice and control over the supports they receive – whether that’s at home, in specialist housing, or in a residential aged care setting. Above all, the system must ensure every Australian enjoys the highest quality of life as we age.”

Dementia Australia CEO Maree McCabe

It is vital for the human rights of people living with dementia, their families and carers to be reflected in a reimagined aged care system.

“Around 459,000 Australians are living with dementia. Consistent and equitable access to quality dementia care must be a cornerstone of aged care, and we must focus on building the capacity of our workforce to understand and support people with dementia.”

Federation of Ethnic Communities Council of Australia Chair Mary Patetsos

“Central to any reform is addressing the increasingly diverse profiles of the ageing population. Catering to culture and language specific needs of consumers and investing in bilingual and bicultural staff should be core business practices of all aged care providers. The current pandemic has also reminded us that communities help facilitate access to services. They need support doing this crucial role in the aged care service ecosystem.”

National Seniors Australia Chief Advocate Ian Henschke

“This year’s budget must finally fund enough packages to make sure the neglect ends, and no one waits more than a month for the home care they need. We also need a new system that tracks where the money goes & punishes providers who put profit before people and cause suffering and death.”

Older Persons Advocacy Network (OPAN) CEO Craig Gear OAM

“Everyone will benefit from an improved aged care system. As our population ages, we need a system that allows older people to contribute and belong. Older people and their carers deserve better.”

An aged care system needs to have…

  1.  1. A better Aged Care Act that is designed to uphold human rights and ensure consumer choice and control; containing stronger protections for consumers; and better accountability of aged care providers, with tiered enforcement measures and penalties.
  2. A simple system where care is guaranteed within 30 days and easy to access whether at home, in the community or in residential aged care (including future de-institutionalised models).
  3. Requirements that ensures full transparency about staffing, quality measures, complaints, compliance and financial outcomes and supported by easy to understand indicators to help inform consumer choice.
  4. A trained, registered and qualified workforce across all care settings, with the right number of staff to ensure quality support and care, with the right skills to meet all their consumers needs and positive attitudes to working with older people.
  5. Proper recognition and support for the role of unpaid family/friend carers who help people to stay at home, with dedicated flexible carer support services designed to preserve their health and wellbeing.
  6. Easy to understand information and local solutions available for older people and their families/friends, supported by care finding, advocacy or case management when they need it to ensure older people access and receive the care they need, when they need it.
  7. A strongly resourced regulator that takes robust action to ensure consumer protections, and fosters public confidence in quality aged care through vigorously investigating, enforcing and prosecuting breaches of standards utilising a wide range of enforcement tools and penalties.
  8. Core business practices that respect all clients with diverse characteristics and life experiences, by ensuring all services are inclusive, culturally safe and sensitive.
  9. A funding model that grows with the population, ensures sufficient taxpayer funding; balanced with consumer contributions where they can afford to pay. Future funding will provide individuals control over their funding, introduce independent pricing regulated by Government and ensure transparency by service providers in how funds are spent.
  10. Better integration of other health and wellbeing services into aged care including but not limited to disability, general practice, palliative care, pharmacy, primary, allied, community, oral and mental health systems.

FECCA celebrates the nation’s new citizens and welcomes changes to citizenship testing

17 September 2020

Today on Australian Citizenship Day, we celebrate with the 2500 people who will become new citizens of our nation and acknowledge the permanency, stability and value offered by this opportunity. Acting Minister for Immigration, Citizenship, Migrant Services and Multicultural Affairs the Hon. Alan Tudge MP has announced that no new English language requirements will be created. This […]

Today on Australian Citizenship Day, we celebrate with the 2500 people who will become new citizens of our nation and acknowledge the permanency, stability and value offered by this opportunity.

Acting Minister for Immigration, Citizenship, Migrant Services and Multicultural Affairs the Hon. Alan Tudge MP has announced that no new English language requirements will be created. This is in line with FECCA’s advocacy and concerns from our members.

The Minister also outlined new questions on Australian values to be included in the citizenship test from 15 November 2020.

The majority of people in Australia, including new citizens, share the common values that were outlined, such as family traditions, fairness, equality, democracy, respect and the rule of law. People who want to become citizens do so because they share those values.

“The goal of many migrants is achieving permanency for themselves and their families. People want to be Australian and they tell us, ‘Australia is a dream country’,” FECCA Chair Mary Patetsos said.

We also recognise the long journey and process many of these new citizens have endured and those who are still waiting for the relief that comes with citizenship.

About 150,000 people are currently waiting to have their citizenship applications processed and the current wait time for citizenship is around 27 months. For those who are pursuing the pathway from temporary visa, to permanent residency to eventual citizenship, this timeframe can often extend beyond 8 years.

“We look forward to working with the Minister to address timely and transparent pathways towards permanent residency and citizenship which continue to be a problem for so many future Australians,” Ms Patetsos said.

For interviews contact: media@fecca.org.au or 0401 125 370.