Fri. Nov 8th, 2024
Occasional Digest - a story for you

Tens of thousands of serious incidents were reported to the aged care watchdog under a new scheme established to prevent and reduce abuse and neglect in residential facilities.

More than 37,800 “serious incident notifications” were received by the Aged Care Quality and Safety Commission during last financial year, according to data published in a report by the Productivity Commission assessing the efficiency and effectiveness of key government services.

Most notifications were related to the unreasonable use of force.

The Serious Incident Response Scheme was introduced in mid-2021 and requires federal government subsidised residential aged care services to systematically report incidents including neglect, psychological or emotional abuse, financial coercion by staff, restrictive practices, and inappropriate sexual conduct.

However, the report notes that the number of notifications received “does not necessarily correlate to the number of instances of harm to an older person in aged care”.

“Reports might include multiple notifications of the same matter, allegations of incidents, and situations where incidents occurred but injury was avoided,” the report states.

Quality standards unmet by many providers

During the same period, the Aged Care Quality and Safety Commission received more than 10,300 complaints, while published data also shows a declining number of providers were issued top-tier re-accreditation status.

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