Otago Daily Times

Squeezed to ‘absolute desperatio­n’

- MIKE HOULAHAN Health reporter mike.houlahan@odt.co.nz

OTAGO and Southland’s aged residentia­l care is in a desperate position because of staffing shortages and the region's elderly will suffer as a result, operators say.

‘‘We are aware of at least 50 aged residentia­l care beds in our region which have been closed and have no immediate prospect of reopening,’’ Birchleigh Residentia­l Care Centre chief executive Malcolm Hendry said.

‘‘This isn’t operators bleating for higher profits, this is operators pleading to be able to give people the care they need, where they need it . . . I have never seen operators as despondent as they are now. They feel completely abandoned.’’

Last week, Mr Hendry circulated an open letter to all southern aged residentia­l care facilities which called on Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern and Finance Minister Grant Robertson to recognise and address ‘‘the crisis our vulnerable elderly are facing’’.

Within two days, half of the facilities in Otago and Southland had signed the letter.

‘‘Aged care providers, without exception, are being squeezed to the point of absolute desperatio­n and feelings of hopelessne­ss,’’ Mr Hendry said.

Nationally, the number of aged residentia­l care nurses is 20% below capacity, a shortage driven by higher district health board pay rates, not enough new nurses being trained, and the soontobeli­fted Covid border restrictio­ns having largely prevented overseas recruitmen­t.

Mr Hendry said costs had been rising for a decade without any increase in government funding for its contract with the sector, and the gap between aged residentia­l care nurses and DHB nurses was only going to increase after the pay equity dispute was settled.

‘‘We are looking at an up to $30,000 gap now between a public sector nurse and an aged residentia­l nurse . . . that sends a message that our older Kiwis just aren’t valued.’’

Aged residentia­l care supported proper pay for all nurses and wanted pay parity between all sectors, Mr Hendry said.

‘‘Aged care nurses have to make clinical decisions on a daily basis as to the care of their residents: their workload, if anything, is higher.’’

Mr Hendry’s letter was sent to all southern members of Parliament, as well as the chairman and chief executive of the Southern District Health Board.

The Birchleigh letter follows hard on the heels of a similar cry for help issued last week by Aged Care Matters, a group of Aged Care Associatio­n members.

It surveyed members and found that almost half would be very unlikely to build new beds within the next year, 65% expected to have to stop or restrict new admissions, and a third thought they might need to close facilities.

Michael Parker, the chief executive of one of ACM’s members, Presbyteri­an Support Southland, said yesterday Mr Hendry’s letter was another demonstrat­ion of how dire things were in the sector.

‘‘Covid has exacerbate­d the issue. On top of the immigratio­n settings and the challenge of losing nurses to the DHBs, we now have Covid in centres which has really put the pressure on and left some organisati­ons wondering if it is worth staying in the business.’’

Some homes had closed in recent years and Presbyteri­an Support itself had been compelled to close an uneconomic facility in Gore, Mr Parker said.

‘‘We supported that facility, as a lossmaking exercise, for 15 years, for the community, but we were at the stage where we could not do that any more.’’

Aged residentia­l was now losing enrolled nurses and support workers to DHBs as well as registered nurses, Mr Parker said.

‘‘DHBs have recognised the issue because if we can’t take people the only place for them to end up is back in hospital and they can’t cope with them.

‘‘But the reason we want pay parity is because it is not a level playing field and we just can’t compete.’’

 ?? PHOTO: PETER MCINTOSH ?? Desperate times . . . Birchleigh Residentia­l Care Centre chief executive Malcolm Hendry says his is one of many southern aged residentia­l care facilities experienci­ng a staffing crisis.
PHOTO: PETER MCINTOSH Desperate times . . . Birchleigh Residentia­l Care Centre chief executive Malcolm Hendry says his is one of many southern aged residentia­l care facilities experienci­ng a staffing crisis.

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