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“Pathetic in effort and ordinary in application” is how one aged care operator described the government’s latest attempts to solve the COVID vaccination crisis in the sector by mandating vaccinations for aged care workers.
“This is massively overdue and will eventually benefit us, but if you read the fine print it is not until September,” he said.
“Robert” (who prefers to remain anonymous so he can speak frankly) is chair of a number of aged care homes in inner Sydney, responsible for 1000 residents and staff. He raised concerns with me in April about the delay in the federal government vaccination rollout for the sector.
Since then the government has been touting that it has now vaccinated all patients in homes — but when I checked with Robert last week he pointed out a huge hole in its spin.
While the government had indeed “offered” all residents the vaccine, only about half took it up, and of more concern the 50% rate was about the same for workers.
The concern in the industry about these low numbers among staff obviously forced national cabinet last night to announce the mandatory vaccination policy.
But Robert says the broader problem is vaccine hesitancy which the government has failed to address — or in some cases made worse.
“We have a massive ethnic population among our workers and there is a huge lack of certainty among those groups,” he said.
Aged care homes like his were already finding it “virtually impossible” to find skilled staff and compulsory vaccination, while welcome, will only make it harder in the short term. Not only must the government drastically improve its virtually non-existent vaccination messaging, but it must also address the worsening staffing crisis.
Border closures are the most obvious problem, he says, because previously many staff in the sector came in on sponsored visas from places like the Philippines.
Indeed federal and state governments should perhaps stop pandering to the profit concerns of the university sector and prioritise aged care workers for the first quarantine hubs rather than those being planned to bring back foreign students, he says.
Robert also points out that despite the welcome $18 billion in extra funding to the sector in the last budget he estimated that comes down to only about $10 a resident.
“They have to set better wages for Australian nursing staff,” he said. “It‘s been a long time since Florence Nightingale, and people can’t just do it for the love of it any more.”
Despite all that, Robert vowed: “My overriding concern is to keep everyone alive and well and we will continue to do that.”
There is a third choice behind importing cheap workers. It is radical- why not increase wages beyond $21 an hour and offer staff proper hours and on site training.
Instead of 2 or3 shifts per week at short notice and a few hours in am to get everyone hurriedly up washed and maybe Fed if there is time- different staff to do pm rush time.
I visited aged care homes around Logan Qld with a refugee looking for work after completing an online certificate course which promised him a career in aged care looking after elderly people.
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He worked for starvation wages and hours for 6 months then gave up. Distressed by level of care he was pushed to rush through.
Turned to packing shelves in a supermarket- better pay and regular fixed night hours.
Our aged care homes are variable in quality- I know from experience. Two relatives in a coastal country place- wonderful creative entertaining care- non profit. Another two in the bad side – one threatened with sexual abuse by a staff member night after night. We kidnapped her- she stopped crying and started laughing again in another place which respect and affection to residents reigned.
670 old people died in Victorian private aged care- does Morrison feel nothing for humanity.
Sept partial vaccination! Weep
Unfortunately many aged care residents are subjected to wall to wall legacy media and NewsCorp papers; unfortunately many vote against their own or at least upcoming generations’ interests.
“stop pandering to the profit concerns of the university sector” – any actual evidence for that piece of rhetoric?
If it was the policy of this PM and his useless Minister to keep the aged alive why did they fail to plan for the pandemic as recorded by the Royal Commission that they were advised on three occasions that the PM and his useless Minister had plan in place but the RC recorded it was buushit and as a result in lead to the unnecessary and lonely deaths of some 685 residents in aged care.The abuse continued as now revealed the Coalition Government has failed to vaccinate all residents in care and only a few workers in aged care obviously hoping the workers will bring the virus in and this PM will have more LEANERS on the budget pass on as saving on the budget.
there is no government on record that has failed our aged more that the Morrison government and its useless Minister
Rather than import cheap labor, how about mandating good wages, REAL wages that people can live on with JOB SECURITY so they only have to work at one place.