If the Andrews government is culpable for the unfolding catastrophe in Victoria, the Morrison government is equally responsible for a full-blown crisis in aged care facilities — despite its efforts at misdirection. And it has even less excuse.
After years of complaints and media exposés of rotten aged care, the government not merely established a royal commission into the sector but in 2018 set up a new approach to regulation, shifting responsibility for aged care accreditation, monitoring and complaints-handling into a new bespoke commission.
That body, the Aged Care Quality and Safety Commission, commenced effective operations in January this year. And it seems to have failed in its first major challenge — ensuring the sector did its utmost to prevent infection getting into aged care facilities.
It’s now clear that the risk posed by aged care workers, in both the home care and residential care sub-sector, working in multiple sites with elderly clients was completely missed by both the government and the commission due to a focus on trying to ensure affected facilities were properly staffed.
During the initial outbreaks at aged care facilities in NSW that saw large numbers of workers having to self-isolate, the government rushed staff from other facilities, or “surge staff” from Aspen Medical, into affected centres.
The federal government also encouraged facilities to use an online workforce supplier to bring in additional staff. Even as the outbreak spread rapidly in Victoria, the commission, as part of its guidelines for Victorian aged care providers, had no concerns about workers working across multiple sites. On June 30 it told Victorian facilities:
“Your staff list and their contact details should be kept up to date. As far as possible you should be aware of which staff also work in other aged care or health services. Make sure your records about this are up to date.”
That was despite Health Department guidelines that during facility outbreaks, “facility staff, including casual and agency staff, should not work at another facility, until the outbreak is declared as over”.
Nineteen days later, the government effectively banned staff working at more than one site in Victoria. What had been the policy solution to one problem had become the critical vector for spreading infections.
All parties are in furious agreement aged care continues to struggle with workforce issues, but no government seems to be able to find a way to address it despite pumping ever greater sums into aged care and expanding opportunities for private companies in the sector.
The commission itself has repeated several times that it was “closely monitoring” Victorian facilities before taking action against the Menarock Essendon facility on July 16 and St Basil’s 10 days later. The latter only came after the relevant union fielded complaints about major breaches of infection control guidelines in the sector.
This appears to be consistent with the commission’s preferred regulatory approach. In its regulatory strategy, the commission argues “neither persistent punishment nor persistent persuasion is effective on its own in achieving” best practice regulation.
“Our regulatory strategy is based on a responsive risk-based approach” the commission says. It emphasises an escalating set of response to breaches by providers that begin with education, “complaints resolution where the outcome results in an informed, empowered consumer”, publication of performance data and monitoring and only culminating in penalties “for persistent and/or serious non-compliance with approved provider aged care responsibilities”.
Health Minister Greg Hunt insisted yesterday that “aged care around the country has been immensely prepared” and that “very similar proportions of public and also private and not-for-profit aged cares have had infections in the area”. On Wednesday he tried to suggest criticism of aged care providers was unfair on aged care workers, saying “the idea that our carers, that our nurses are not providing that care, I think, is a dangerous statement to make. They are wonderful human beings and I won’t hear a word against them.”
That’s a complete straw man. No one has criticised aged care workers. The targets are aged care providers — particularly privately run facilities — and the federal government, which has direct regulatory and funding responsibility for all aged care, both residential and in-home.
“A responsive risk-based approach” hasn’t cut it, and aged care residents are paying with their lives.
Where type of legislation does Australia need to save aged care? Let us know your thoughts by writing to letters@crikey.com.au. Please include your full name to be considered for publication in Crikey’s Your Say section
Nailed it BK
The federal government’s approach seems to have been cross your fingers and hope for no community transmission. Not a good plan.
Could anyone explain how quarantines actually work in our country?
I know that we used to have Quarantine Act, which was the burden of the federal government. My understanding is that it was repealed and replaced with Biosecurity Act and all the quarantine domain went into that act and is specifically in the Department of Agriculture.
At which point, the state was delegated the management of quarantine? What expertise was the state meant to have in maintaining it? Did the state actually have quarantine management in any of its state departments?
Australia wan’t created in January, was it? If we have a designated taskforce, where is it? What has it been doing? Why is no one raising this very important questions?
*these
To quote Nick Dyrenfurth, at The Age/SMH 2 days back;
“The Morrison government’s “take the credit/deflect blame’ shtick is wearing thin. After all, the Commonwealth has ultimate responsibility for Australia’s border security – spelt out in the constitution, Quarantine Act (1908) and Biosecurity Act (2015).”
Breaking news on ABC RN -Thursday evening – that the BruderFarce Boarding officer “misread” the health status report, both from the Plague Princess captain & NSW Health.
So, no probs. that a remedial reading course won’t rectify.
Such a relief to know that Pezzullo & his puppet, the Gestapotato, are in no way responsible.
Border Farce is preparing to hand the Border Farce officer out to dry.
I think that they are hoping she will keep her mouth shut regarding a 15 minute phone call with an unknown person, before she granted the ship “Pratique” which means a clean bill of health.
The only person who can grant this ship this status is the Border Farce Officer on duty at the time.
While ever aged care is treated as a profit making enterprise, the standard will not improve significantly. Profit means cutting corners where ever possible to improve the bottom line. So lower staff numbers, less skilled staff, less outings and entertainment for residents, and lower standard of nutrition.
Perhaps Australia needs a counter to cheap seeking profiteering conservative greedy anuses feeling detached as they count the loot and siphon it off by cheapness, denying workers decent wages and conditions, security, an ability to assist in crises when in fact they must scrounge and scrape for existence and turn up crook or infectious, How many USA equity funds, prudent plunderers, pirates of pillaging, are in this game set up for them by our fellatio friendly conservative governments? Executives whose orders lead to misery and hardship are actually thieves and murderers, but the “not me” shrug has been set up and is permitted when “business is business.” The footy is on with spitting, snotting, coughing, clinches and scrums and rucks, yet others are told to not gather, to wear a mask. Who pays the madam for first go…? It’s conservative greed and indifference at the source…