Mercury (Hobart)

Unskilled staff fear as health crisis hits

- JUDY AUGUSTINE judy.augustine@news.com.au

TASMANIA is on the brink of a staffing crisis in the health, aged care and disability sectors, with providers growing more desperate and settling for unskilled staff, the Health and Community Services Union says.

HACSU secretary Tim Jacobson said the union was working with a Tasmanian disability provider that told employees in a staff memo it would be creating a register of untrained workers.

“One of the Covid challenges that we are preparing to manage is a shortage of support workers when they have been identified as close contacts,” the memo said.

The basic criteria for being on the register was to be double vaccinated, be of good health and have a working with vulnerable people check.

The memo said the untrained worker would work under the direction of a certified support worker.

Mr Jacobson said it would be unsafe to allow untrained workers to work in the sector.

“The reality is disability work is not unskilled work, particular­ly in the context of residentia­l disability,” Mr Jacobson said.

“Those clients require a high level of care that requires a high level of skill.”

He said certain sectors were on the verge of crisis due to the high level of virus transmissi­on affecting the workforce.

“We’ve got a looming staffing crisis across health, aged care and disability and we’re seeing that play out in disability,” Mr Jacobson said.

He said the government should have been better prepared.

“Disability is a federal responsibi­lity,” Mr Jacobson said. “They have left the disability sector on its own.

“We’ve had a significan­t number of calls not just from workers but employers pleading with us to get the services they need.

“They haven’t been able to access decent numbers of PPE, and they weren’t prioritise­d when it came to tests.

“They’ve been completely left to their own devices.”

An NDIS commission spokespers­on said all NDIS providers were required to comply with the NDIS code of conduct, which required providers to deliver services in a safe and competent manner.

“Registered NDIS providers must also ensure that key personnel and other workers in certain types of roles have a worker screening clearance that meets the requiremen­ts of the NDIS Practice Standards,” the spokespers­on said.

“This helps ensure that key personnel and workers in these roles do not pose an unacceptab­le risk to the safety and wellbeing of NDIS participan­ts.”

 ?? ?? Tim Jacobson of the Health and Community Services Union. Picture: Richard Jupe
Tim Jacobson of the Health and Community Services Union. Picture: Richard Jupe

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