Morrison welcomes input on aged care
ALL Australians will be given a say on the royal commission into aged care with an online portal to hear horror stories of abuse and neglect.
The Federal Government has resisted calls for the inquiry to be expanded to include disability providers.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison is urging people to come forward with their experiences, which will help determine the royal commission’s terms of reference.
The inquiry will focus on aged care residential and home aged care, but also look at young people with disabilities in residential aged care.
But Mr Morrison said he did not want “an inquiry into everything” as it would “become too broad”.
But the PM said he wanted to understand the extent of the abuse and would look at whether it reached other areas such as the disability sector.
“We would encourage all Australians to go and participate in that process,” he told an aged-care round table meeting in Canberra.
“Where you have particular insights or suggestions, they will be taken on board. All of that will then be passed on to the royal commission once it gets established and gets about its job.”
Young people with disabilities who have complex needs often live in aged care homes and are vulnerable to the same types of abuse and neglect inflicting elderly Australians.
Greens senator Jordon Steele-John, who has mild cerebral palsy and uses a wheelchair, said the Government needed to focus on young people in aged care, but also broaden the inquiry to look at all the violence, abuse and neglect of disabled Australians.
Aged Care Minister Ken Wyatt and Health Minister Greg Hunt will start talking with elderly residents, families, advocates and the aged care industry next week with a final terms of reference to be determined in the coming months.
Mr Hunt said the problems were not restricted to any one part of the aged sector.
All members of the community can now have their say on the terms of reference on the Department of Health’s website.