Fiji Sun

Australia aged-care scandals spark national inquiry, PM concerned

The announceme­nt comes a year after a state-run dementia nursing home in South Australia state was shut when an investigat­ion revealed horrific mistreatme­nt of elderly residents over a 10year period.

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Canberra: Australia will launch a national inquiry into its scandal-plagued aged care sector, Prime Minister Scott Morrison said on Sunday, following numerous reports of abuse, neglect and mismanagem­ent.

The announceme­nt comes a year after a staterun dementia nursing home in South Australia state was shut when an investigat­ion revealed horrific mistreatme­nt of elderly residents over a 10-year period.

Since that scandal, the health department has closed almost one aged care service a month, while a growing number are failing to meet standards, Mr Morrison said in a statement. “Incidences of older people being hurt by failures of care simply cannot be explained or excused. We must be assured about how widespread these cases are... There clearly remains areas of concern with regard to the quality and safety of aged care services.”

The inquiry will probe profit and non-for-profit organisati­ons, and also look at the care given to younger Australian­s with disabiliti­es living in such facilities.

There has been a 177 per cent leap in the number of aged-care homes where a “serious risk” to residents were identified in the 2017-18 financial year, according to government data released to Sydney’s Sunday Telegraph.

The figures also show a 292 per cent increase in the number of facilities that were falling significan­tly short of government regulation­s. The Prime Minister said the royal commission would be critical in guiding how Australia copes with caring for its growing elderly population.

Demand for services is expected to surge as the “baby boomer” generation born after World War II swells the ranks of retirees. Canberra funding for aged care is already at record levels, reaching AU$18.6 billion (FJ$28.3bn) in 2017-18.

The government expects it to grow by a further AU$5 bn (FJ$7.6bn) in the next five years. Around one in seven Australian­s are aged 65 and above, according to 2017 government data, with the proportion of elderly people tipped to reach 22 per cent of the population by 2057. A damning 146-page report released in February catalogued numerous complaints of abuse and neglect at aged care facilities.

 ??  ?? Around one in seven Australian­s are aged 65 and above, with the proportion of elderly people tipped to reach 22 per cent of the population by 2057.
Around one in seven Australian­s are aged 65 and above, with the proportion of elderly people tipped to reach 22 per cent of the population by 2057.

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