Chapter 2- Workforce shortages and training
Introduction
2.1
Issues surrounding workforce shortages and training in nursing,
including the aged care sector, have been debated and reviewed for some time: there
have been 34 reviews of nursing in seven years.[1] Indeed, in June 2002 this Committee
tabled its report on its inquiry into nursing.[2]
In the report the Committee noted the acute shortage of nurses in the aged care
sector. The Committee pointed to evidence which indicated that delivery of
quality care was under threat from the retreat of qualified nurses, both
registered nurses and enrolled nurses, from the aged care sector. The Committee
made a range of recommendations directed to improving recruitment and retention
of nurses in the aged care sector including changes to workplace practices and at
improving the image and training of nurses in the aged care sector.[3]
2.2
Evidence received during this inquiry suggests that there
has been little improvement to the situation since 2002 with concerns being
raised not only about the shortage of aged care nurses but also general
practitioners with older persons' health expertise, geriatricians, psycho-geriatricians
and allied health professionals.[4] The
challenge for the future is to ensure a skilled and committed workforce, able
to meet the growing demand for services for ageing Australians.
The aged care workforce
2.3
The following provides an overview of trends in the
aged care workforce from the Review of
Pricing Arrangements in Residential Aged Care Final Report (Hogan Review)[5]:
- in June 2000, approximately 131 230 people,
or 1.3 per cent of the Australian workforce were employed in the aged care
industry;
- an estimated 32 628 people volunteered in
aged care;
- between 1995-96 and 1999-2000, the number of
employees in residential aged care declined while the number of people being cared
for increased;
- in accommodation for the aged (low care), the
number of employees increased by 33 per cent; and
- between 1996 and 2001 the share of direct care
provided by registered and enrolled nurses declined in both nursing homes and
accommodation for the aged while the use of personal carers increased
significantly.
2.4
The decline in employees in residential care was
attributed to the decline in the use of staff not involved in the direct
provision of care as a result of consolidation within the sector which enabled greater
economies of scale; a greater reliance on outsourcing of some activities; and,
greater use of multiskilling. The increase in the use of personal carers
reflected both the growing shortage of nursing staff and the development of
more efficient workforce structures.[6]
2.5
Australian Institute
of Health and Welfare data on
nursing shows that:
- in 2001 there were 19 109 registered nurses
and 13 109 enrolled nurses employed in geriatrics/gerontology which
represented 12 per cent of all registered nurses and 31.2 per cent of all
enrolled nurses;
- between 1997 and 2001, the number of nurses
working in geriatrics/gerontology declined 8.7 per cent;
- nursing homes and aged care accommodation
accounted for 14.6 per cent of all nurses – the second largest proportion;
- the number of nurses working in nursing homes
and aged care accommodation declined by 28.0 per cent between 1995 and 2001;
and
- nurses working in nursing homes and aged care
accommodation tended to be older than nurses in other work settings and they worked
shorter hours.[7]
2.6
The National Institute of Labour Studies (NILS) report,
The Care of Older Australians: A Picture
of Residential Aged Care Workforce, stated that 'the existing level of knowledge
about workers in aged care is remarkably limited' and no single data source provides
an accurate and detailed appraisal of direct care employment in residential
aged care, especially to inform complex workforce planning. The Report stated
that, in 2003, there were 116 000 direct care employees of whom
25 000 were Registered Nurses, 15 000 were Enrolled Nurses, 67 000
were Personal Carers and 9 000 were Allied Health workers. NILS stated
that 'there are few signs that this is a labour market in crisis, or even under
serious stress' but went on to noted that there were some indications of
stress. These included that nurse are substantially older than the typical
female worker, the relatively high number of vacancies for Registered Nurses
and the high levels of turnover of direct care staff.[8]
Issues facing the aged care workforce
There are a range of significant workforce issues in the aged
care sector. Serious staff shortages, especially of qualified nurses and allied
health professionals, are widespread. We experience continuous difficulty in
recruiting qualified staff because of shortages and the necessity to compete
with the acute sector that has a capacity to remunerate at much higher levels.
Too much paperwork leads to staff burnout as dedicated staff struggle to
maintain levels of care while dealing with burdensome documentation
requirements. There is no real measure of the actual staff requirements for
residential care.[9]
Nursing staff
2.7
The general shortage of nurses is impacting on the aged
care sector. The Hogan Review stated that the shortage of nurses was greater in
the residential aged care sector than in other areas of the health system.[10] Even though there is a general
shortage, some areas are more acute with the Queensland Government pointing to shortages
of psychogeriatric nurses and aged care nurses in rural and remote communities,
including Indigenous communities. In the future staff shortages will be
exacerbated as the present residential aged care workforce is ageing and there
are high levels of casualisation in the sector.[11]
2.8
Witnesses stated that the barriers to recruitment,
retention and re-entry of nurses to the aged care nursing were well known and
include:
- lack of wage parity;
- inadequate staffing levels;
- inappropriate skills mix;
- workload pressure;
- increased stress levels; and
- an inability to deliver quality care.[12]
2.9
The lack of wage parity was seen as a major barrier.
Witnesses indicated that there were still significant differences in wages
between aged care nurses and those working in other sectors.[13] The Queensland Nurses Union (QNU) pointed
to differences in maximum and minimum wages in Queensland
in 2004 ranging $68.06 per week (13.3 per cent) for an assistant in
nursing to $93.98 per week (15.7 per cent) for Enrolled Nurses and from
$165.35 to over $300 for Registered Nurses levels 1 to 5.[14] The ANF commented that the wage
disparity has been progressively widening as nurses in the private and public
acute sectors have secured superior outcomes through enterprise bargaining. As
at April 2004 the wage disparity stood at 21.6 per cent.[15] As a consequence, the aged care sector
is struggling to be competitive both in relation to wages and career
opportunities for staff.
2.10
Evidence pointed to changes in staffing levels
impacting adversely on the aged care workforce. The QNU stated the lack of
accountability in the private sector has led to the erosion of staffing levels,
with many employers continuing to cut nursing hours. The QNU commented that it
was assisting members in facilities where this is occurring. Members in those
facilities reported that their workloads were already unsustainable even prior
to any cuts being implemented. Unpaid overtime was worked to complete duties.[16] Witnesses also noted that the changes
to staffing levels are being made when the dependency levels in residential
aged care facilities has risen, with the number of residents receiving high
level care increasing from 58 per cent in 1993 to 63.6 per cent in 2002.[17]
2.11
The shortage of nurses and other workers also raised
occupational health and safety concerns. Many submissions pointed to the high
incidence of injuries in the aged care sector. The QNU stated that nursing
homes alone account for 10.3 per cent of injures in the Health and Community
Services Sector, with increased workloads correlating to increased injury
rates.[18] Nurses often work through
breaks and find it difficult to comply with manual lifting policies that, for
example, require two staff to perform resident transfers. Excessive workloads
lead to shortcuts being taken. This adds to the stress of staff who cannot
deliver quality care to residents.
2.12
Dr K
Price of the Centre for Research into
Sustainable Health Care also noted that employers are reticent to employ older
workers because of their age. Research had indicated that aged care employers
considered that older workers were at risk of injury and were using
occupational health and safety laws not to employ older workers.[19]
2.13
Inadequate skills mix was another continuing and major
concern. It was noted that there had been substantial substitution of personal
carers for nurses in recent years. The ANF (Victoria)
commented that in Victoria
the skills mix of Registered Nurses (RNs) to residents had fallen from an
average of 1 RN to 30 residents across all shifts in 1997 to 1 RN to 60 residents
during the day, out to 1 RN to 90 or 120 at the evening and night shift. Some
high care facilities only employ a registered nurse for two two-hour shifts per
day – to administer medications. The ANF (Victoria)
noted that these facilities still meet accreditation standards.[20]
2.14
Dr Price
also commented:
...we limit the number of RNs, we limit the number of ENs and we
put in care workers with only a certificate 3 at the most – and we expect to
get a workforce. Why should an RN go into a workforce where he or she knows
that they are going to be the only one on for 60 residents? Why should
somebody? We have to stop it at some point. There should be many more. There is
a one to five ratio in acute care: why isn’t there that ratio in aged
residential care?[21]
2.15
While not opposing the use of personal carers, the ANF
commented that it was opposed to the replacement of registered and enrolled
nurses with unlicensed workers 'where the work requires the skills and
knowledge of either an enrolled or registered nurse'. Unlicensed nursing and
personal carers generally are competent but they are not able to always
recognise serious problems including changes in the health status of residents
and they require supervision and support from registered nurses.[22]
2.16
As a result of these changes, registered nurses in aged
care workplaces are facing increases in spans of responsibility and associated
difficulties in adequately supervising other staff, including staff with lower
qualifications. The QNU stated that 'these factors are significant influences
on why registered nurses are leaving and are not being attracted to work in
aged care services'.[23] Skills mix is
discussed further in Chapter 3.
2.17
The level of paperwork remains an issue for nurses.[24] ANHECA commented that one of the major
reasons given for registered nurses leaving the residential care sector or
declining to enter the sector is the sheer volume of paperwork required of
registered nurses working in residential care.[25]
Witnesses commented that excessive paperwork is required to validate
appropriate resident classification for the Resident Classification Scale (RCS)
funding scheme, accreditation processes and the complaints resolution scheme.
Nurses were spending valuable time 'form filling' rather than providing
hands-on nursing care. The issue of excessive documentation is addressed in the
Chapter 3.
Personal carers
2.18
The Health Services Union (HSU) and the Liquor
Hospitality and Miscellaneous Union (LHMU) drew the Committee's attention to
significant issues for personal carers in the aged care sector. Personal carers
received relatively low wages. The HSU (NSW) stated that a carer with a
Certificate III in Aged Care earns $13.53 per hour. The hourly rate is less
than that of checkout operators in supermarkets but requires TAFE certificate
qualifications in aged care. Carers are required to provide a range of personal
care services, with minimal supervision as well as simple health needs such as
wound dressing, attend to blood pressure, and temperature and pulse checks. As
a result, it is extremely difficult to attract and retain younger staff.[26]
2.19
The Brotherhood of St Laurence also noted that personal
carers in the community work in relative isolation which makes it difficult to
attract and retain workers. Of particular concern was the lack regular support
and supervision for many workers. Many organisations provide only limited
support to workers to undertake training – in some cases all training costs,
including time, are borne by the worker.[27]
2.20
Staffing shortages also impact on personal carers and
the level of care they can provide to residents. The HSU stated that its
members reported that because of understaffing they only have time to provide
'basic care' to residents and regret that the feeding and showering of
residents is too often 'like a production line'. In some instances, basic
hygiene suffers with residents going without showers, teeth not being brushed
and hair not combed or washed.[28] The
LHMU indicated that at one facility it was reported that three care workers had
60 minutes to get 49 residents out of bed, showered, dressed and into the dining
room for breakfast.[29]
2.21
Of serious concern to members of the HSU was
understaffing at night. It was stated that it is not uncommon for one carer to
be rostered on alone overnight in a hostel looking after up to 50 residents. If
an emergency occurs there is no backup. For example, if a resident falls the
carer is often physically unable to assist the resident off the floor and back
into bed. In such cases, carers will either call an ambulance to assist or make
the person comfortable on the floor until morning when more staff arrives.[30]
2.22
Because of staff shortages, the HSU stated that carers
are often required to work double shifts. Unpaid overtime is also worked by
carers to fulfil their own sense of obligation to frail residents.[31] This contributes to stress and fatigue
The HSU also voiced concern that staff shortages contributed to safety problems
for staff, citing cases of assaults by intruders at aged care facilities.[32]
Community care
One of the things that we are now seeing is a reluctance of
people to take up work in the community sector. I get a sense from within my
own membership that the community care work force is in – I hate using the word
'crisis' – peril of leaving a good number of people in their homes without
ongoing support if we as a nation do not do something to enhance the benefits
that community care workers get to make it an attractive field of endeavour for
workers to work in. That is the community care aspect.[33]
2.23
In the community care sector there is increased demand
for workers as the sector is experiencing significant growth. The Queensland
Government stated that the three drivers in the size and occupational
distribution of the workforce were seen as: the rate of funding growth in
community aged care programs and related areas; increased reliance on the paid
care workforce as opposed to the volunteer workforce; and the preference of
many older people who have significant impairments to stay at home.[34]
2.24
All States and Territories are experiencing rapid
growth of community care programs in both ageing and disability. In Queensland,
for example, HACC has had an average growth of around 10 per cent per annum
over the past five years. At the same time Community Aged Care Packages have
grown at a rapid rate and a number of other programs have either been initiated
or expanded, most notably Veterans Home Care and the Extended Aged Care at Home
(EACH) program. As a result, demand for a skilled workforce has increased.[35]
2.25
The expansion of disability programs which employ
people with similar skills for similar tasks such as personal care (eg help
with toileting, showering and dressing) means that there is a competitive
market for trained staff. NSW Health commented that there are staff shortages
for community care services for older people, particularly for nurses and
therapists. The impact is that older people may not receive appropriate
community care services.[36]
2.26
Workers in the community care workforce are often part
time or casual workers or contractors. It was reported that there is a high
turnover of workers which poses difficulties for staff replacement, especially
in rural areas. Reasons given for the high turnover include low pay, lack of
career path, having to work in relative isolation, occupational health and
safety challenges associated with working in the client's own home and the age
profile of the community care workforce.[37]
2.27
It was also stated that there is evidence that many
organisations which relied on volunteers to provide services such as day
respite programs, meals on wheels, social support and transport are finding it
difficult attract volunteers. Organisations are also finding that they must
employ more staff as there is increased demand to provide more services, to improve
quality and to deliver on compliance obligations such as meeting standards,
entering client information on data bases and preparing reports to funding
agencies.
2.28
As more people are now opting to stay at home for
longer as they age, greater numbers of extremely frail older people who have
significant dependencies and complex service requirements are living in the
community. To ensure that older people can live at home safely, requires a more
highly skilled workforce.
2.29
The Queensland Government noted that 'there is a
paucity of information about the community care workforce'. There is no
comprehensive data source available for the community aged care workforce in Queensland
that would enable Queensland Health to identify shortages of skilled staff,
turnover rates, or occupational categories/geographic areas where shortages are
particularly severe. The Government suggested that this would appear to be a
national issue where the Commonwealth Government could take an important
leadership role as it is the primary funder of community aged care programs.[38]
Medical practitioners and allied
health professionals
2.30
The Australian Medical Association (AMA) indicated that
there had been a decline in the number of general practitioners visiting residential
aged care facilities. The AMA stated that there were a number of barriers to
health professionals visiting residential aged care facilities including the
absence of appropriate Medicare Benefits Schedule items for geriatricians, the
large amount of paperwork expected of GPs and staff of the facilities and the
lack of integration of medical services in the aged care system.[39]
2.31
The Victorian Government also commented on the role of
GPs and noted that, although the GP workforce does not strictly form part of
the aged care workforce, GP workforce shortages have contributed to the decline
in Medicare Benefit Schedule funded services provided to people in residential
care. The Government welcomed the Commonwealth's plan to enhance GP services
for older people by introducing a new Medicare rebate for GPs to visit aged
care facilities to provide a comprehensive assessment of residents' health and
funding to Divisions of General Practice to establish panels of GPs for
residential aged care facilities in their area.[40]
2.32
In relation to specialist care, the AMA stated that consultant
physicians in geriatric medicine were best placed to provide specialist aged
care advice and education across the whole continuum of care. However, 'government
health programs such as the existing Medical Benefits Schedule (MBS) structure
and the MedicarePlus initiatives economically marginalise the geriatric medical
workforce and restrict the provision of private hospital, community and
religious specialist aged care'.[41]
2.33
The Australian Society of Geriatric Medicine also
commented on the lack of geriatricians and other specialists working in aged
care facilities.[42] Most consultant
physicians in geriatric medicine working in Australia
work in the public hospital system. The AMA commented that this means that 'despite
the clear health needs and the increasing numbers of older people in our
community, those other than in public hospitals have limited access to the type
of specialist aged care expertise that geriatricians and consultant physicians
specialising in aged care can provide'. Ways to train and attract more
consultant physicians to geriatric medicine, to make the most of their time and
to involve the GP and other health professionals in more integrated team
approaches are needed. The AMA concluded that a key to this development is the
MBS items, which encourage GPs to work in aged care settings and for
geriatricians to provide core geriatric medical services.[43]
2.34
NSW Health indicated that with the exception of paediatrics,
NSW has existing or emerging shortages in 24 key medical workforce groups.
Geriatric medicine is one of the specialties in shortage. To address all of
these shortages, 'every State and Territory Government needs to negotiate
training plans and numbers for medical specialty trainees based on workforce
requirements' with the medical colleges. The NSW Government has already begun
this process through their negotiation with the Royal
Australian College
of Physicians on basic physician training. NSW Health commented that this new
system is based on a number of principles that ensure trainees are equitably
distributed across the State at the same time as improving their training
experience.[44]
2.35
Another area of concern was the lack of specialist and
generalist nutritionists and dietitians. Metropolitan Domiciliary Care noted
that 'good nutrition is particularly important for older people to maintain an
independent lifestyle for as long as possible and to minimise morbidity and
premature death'.[45] It also stated:
A network of specialist and generalist nutrition workers is
needed in the public health system to initiate support and help sustain healthy
ageing initiatives which are centred on nutrition. We are finding that the
initiatives the organisations want to take are not able to be supported because
the specialist nutrition workforce or generalist workers who have some
experience in that area are just not there...There is an insufficient nutrition
workforce that is adequately skilled and actively engaged in the aged care
setting.[46]
Commonwealth Government Programs and Initiatives
2.36
The Commonwealth has recognised the need to address the
shortage of nurses, including aged care nurses. The Department of Health and
Ageing (DoHA) provided these recent
initiatives directed at aged care workforce issues:
- The Aged Care Workforce Committee: established
in 1996 with representatives of peak organisations, aged care employees,
approved providers, higher education and vocational education providers,
professional groups and consumers. The Committee has assisted in identifying
workforce issues and is developing a framework to respond to current and future
issues.
- The National Aged Care Workforce Census and
Survey: the Commonwealth, in partnership with the Aged Care Workforce
Committee, has commissioned a national census and survey of the residential
aged care workforce. The results of the study, which was undertaken by the
National Institute of Labour Studies at Flinders University, are contained in
the report The Care of Older Australians:
A Picture of the Residential Aged Care Workforce. Major findings include
that the workforce is well qualified, the overall vacancy rate and the vacancy
rate for each major occupation was not high, but there was some difficulty in
recruiting nurses and the overall shortage of registered nurses is affecting
the aged care workforce.
- The
Recruitment and Retention of Nurses in Residential Aged Care, published in
2002, was commissioned by the Commonwealth from La Trobe University. It
identified several solutions to improve the recruitment and retention of nurses
in the aged care sector. The Commonwealth response included a number of
workforce initiatives.
- Nurse Practitioners in Aged Care: the Commonwealth,
with the Aged Care Workforce Committee, is investigating opportunities to
support trials for nurse practitioners within the aged care sector in recognition
of the importance of professional development and career paths for registered
nurses in aged care. ACT Health will conduct a trial over a 12-month period and
cover residential, community and acute care settings.
- Nurse Re-entry Programs: the Commonwealth is
funding several aged care specific nurse re-entry program pilots. The aim of
the programs is to prepare former nurses for employment in the aged care
sector, by offering them aged care nursing courses to encourage them to return
to practice in rural and regional aged care services.
- Rewarding Best Practice: Good practice in
recruitment and retention of skilled staff has been encouraged and rewarded
through the Minister’s Awards for Excellence in the Aged Care Industry and the
Better Health and Safety Awards.
2.37
DoHA also
provided information on initiatives in training, both general nurse training
and specific aged care nursing training. The Commonwealth has funded the Aged
Care Undergraduate Nursing Principles Project, which was conducted by the School
of Nursing at the Queensland
University of Technology. The resulting Aged
Care Core Component in Undergraduate Nursing Principles Paper outlines a
number of matters including the core values underpinning the learning and
teaching of aged care; desirable learning outcomes; and principles for the learning
and teaching of aged care.
2.38
In July 2004, the Commonwealth announced new university
undergraduate nursing places. In the 2002-03 Budget, the Commonwealth provided
$26.3 million over four years to support and encourage more people to enter and
re-enter aged care nursing, particularly in rural and regional areas. Approximately
$7 million of this funding was for the More Aged Care Nurses Scholarship
Scheme. Under this initiative up to 1,000 aged care nursing scholarships,
valued at up to $10 000 a year, are being provided. More than 900 have
already been awarded for undergraduate study, continuing professional development,
honours courses and re-entry programs. The Commonwealth also provided funding
to ensure that care staff employed in smaller and less viable aged care homes
were provided with appropriate training opportunities.
2.39
In the 2002-03 Budget, the Commonwealth increased
residential aged care subsidies by $211 million over four years. DoHA
stated that an important aim of this funding was to assist employers of aged
care workers with the recruitment and retention of quality staff by offering
increases in wages and improved working conditions.[47]
2004-05 Budget initiatives
2.40
In the 2004-05 Budget a further $101.4 million was
allocated over four years to assist the aged care sector workforce. Initiatives
included in this package, Better Skills
for Better Care, were aimed at:
- assisting up to 15 750 aged care workers to
access recognised education and training opportunities such as Certificate III
or IV in aged care, or enrolled nurse qualifications;
- assisting up to 5,250 enrolled nurses to access
recognised and approved medication administration education and training programs;
- assisting up to 8,000 aged care workers to
access the Workplace English Language and Literacy program (WELL); and
- allowing more than 1,700 students to commence
nursing studies over the next four years.
The funding for vocational education and training and
medication management training places will be provided to eligible aged care
providers to purchase the training directly.[48]
2.41
In the 2004-05 Budget and in response to the Hogan
Review, the Commonwealth provided additional funding of $877.8 million over four
years for a conditional adjustment payment. This funding was aimed at assisting
aged care providers to continue to provide high quality care for older people,
including assisting in paying more competitive wages to nurses and other staff.
In order to qualify for the payment, aged care providers will be required to
encourage staff to undertake training, publish audited financial statements and
participate in periodic workforce surveys.
2.42
The Department noted that with the ageing population,
there will be increasing demand for aged care nurses across all health sectors,
including in hospital and community settings.[49]
The Department stated that the Commonwealth had recognised the workforce issues
in aged care and has implemented a strategic approach in meeting the challenges.
It has 'demonstrated its commitment to the aged care workforce through significant
budget investments in training and education for aged care workers, policy and
research initiatives and trailing innovative programs in partnership with the
aged care sector'. In addition:
The role of government is not confined to the federal sphere:
state and territory governments, and local governments, all have critical
roles, in policy and service delivery. A nationally consistent scope of
practice for enrolled nurses, for example, depends on state and territory
legislation.
Our whole community also has an important role to play,
particularly in valuing older people and the people who care for them: the
image of aged care continues to represent a major obstacle to recruitment and
retention in the aged care workforce.[50]
National Aged Care Workforce
Strategy
2.43
In April 2005, the National Aged Care Workforce
Strategy was released. The Strategy was developed by the Aged Care Workforce
Committee following consultation with the aged care sector. The Strategy
identifies the workforce profile of the residential aged care sector and its
needs until 2010. The Minister for Ageing, the Hon Julie Bishop, stated that:
In coming years, we will not only have more older Australians,
but more people who are frail, as well as new patterns of disease and
disability. We will need a skilled, professional and flexible workforce to
provide more services, better quality services and more service choices to the
growing number of older people.[51]
2.44
The Strategy aims to provide a people management and
development framework for a sustainable and viable aged care sector. The
Strategy is made up of seven objectives and 17 strategies. The objectives
include workforce profile, education, training and development, a responsive
workforce and status and image.[52]
2.45
It was noted that the Strategy focuses on the
residential aged care workforce and that further work will be needed to broaden
the strategic response to cover the full aged care workforce in all settings.
The Productivity Commission is to undertake a study of the economic and fiscal
implications of the future ageing of Australia's
population on the labour supply and to examine the issues impacting on the
health workforce. The Commission's findings will influence the implementation
of the Strategy.[53]
State Government initiatives
2.46
In addition to Commonwealth Government initiatives to
address workforce issues in the aged care sector, State and Territory
Governments have instituted programs to strengthen the aged care workforce. For
example, in Victoria
the HACC Workforce Development Strategy Project aims to improve the
recruitment, retention and training of community case workers, increase the
diversity of the HACC workforce and enhance professional development
opportunities for staff. Aged care training has been enhanced through the
Office of Tertiary and Training Education and the New Apprentice Trainee
Completion Bonus scheme. In addition, a pilot project to increase the number of
geriatric medicine trainees has been launched.[54]
2.47
Queensland Health has also instituted a program to improve
recruitment of nurses to aged care work. This includes an initiative which
funds and supports placements for new graduates across the aged care continuum
(acute, community, residential aged care); the Transition to Practice training
program; and trialing the Nurse Practitioner in Aged Care settings. Queensland
Health is also developing a HACC Workforce Skills Development Strategy to
develop a framework for the skills development of the HACC workforce in Queensland.
This will help develop an appropriate minimum level of skill in areas
identified as essential to the provision of quality services. The Strategy will
be implemented over a three year period between July 2005 and June 2008.[55]
Impact of Commonwealth Government initiatives and programs
The federal budget of 2004 was a defining moment for the aged
care sector. However, much more must be done and further guarantees need to be
given that people accessing aged care services will not be disadvantaged by
changes and reforms to aged care.[56]
Geriaction therefore believes that the 2004-5 Budget initiatives
will have virtually no impact on age care workforce shortages. While the
training initiatives are welcomed this organisation believes they will have
limited impact on the current workforce situation. These appear to be little
more than bandaid measures that fail to address the need for a comprehensive
workforce planning strategy. Only with workforce planning will the sector be able
to develop recruitment, retention, and training strategies that will deliver
quality outcomes over the long-term.[57]
2.48
Many witnesses welcomed the Commonwealth's initiatives in
the aged care sector. However, it was generally considered that some of the initiatives
would not achieve their objectives and some areas require further work.[58]
Nurse education and training
Undergraduate education
2.49
The Commonwealth has, over a number of years, provided
additional funding for undergraduate nursing places. In the 2004-05 Budget, funding
was allocated over four years to enable 1 700 additional students to
commence undergraduate nursing with a focus on aged care. In addition, the Aged
Care Nursing Scholarship and Support Scheme provides funding for undergraduate
study, continuing professional development, honours courses and re-entry
programs.
2.50
While the increase in the number of nursing places was
welcomed, witnesses expressed doubts that the increase would provide a long
term solution to the workforce problems facing the aged care sector. Witnesses
pointed to the Hogan Review's recommendations for increases in the number of
registered nurse places at Australian universities and the 2004-05 Budget
response:
Hogan Review Recommendations
|
Budget Response
|
Registered nurse places:
2700 over
three years
|
Registered nurse places:
1094 over
four years
|
1000 in 2004-05
|
400 in 2004-05
|
The Hogan
Review recommended that these additional places should only be made available
to universities which offer specialist training for aged care nurses.[59]
2.51
UnitingCare commented:
What the government provided in the budget in response to that
review was approximately half the level of training and places requested in the
Hogan review. Whilst I think that it is great that the government is moving towards
a better career path, better training, more places for the nursing industry and
the enrolled nurses and carers generally, there needs to be more. I think Hogan
probably got it fairly right.[60]
2.52
The ANF also stated:
The Australian Government has increased undergraduate nursing
course places in universities but the number allocated falls well short of what
the industry needs. Both the National Review of Nursing Education and the Hogan
report called for far greater numbers of undergraduate places. The ANF has
estimated that 1100 extra places per year for four years is necessary to
adequately address the nursing shortage.[61]
2.53
While expressing concern at the shortage of nurses, NSW
Health noted that the NSW State Government has limited influence over the
number and type of education and training places that are established in the
higher education sector. It argued that it is critical that better linkages
between the health, education and training sectors are established to ensure
that the right number and type of health professionals are available to meet
community need. It was noted that the greatest workforce pressures are in
rural, regional and outer metropolitan regions and more HECS funded places for
nurses, doctors, dentists and allied health staff in these workforce pressure
areas are needed, as well as incorporating more targeted rural clinical
placements into curricula.[62]
2.54
Witnesses argued that with the general shortage of
nurses, the increase in places would not keep pace with the demands of the
acute sector let alone those of the aged care sector. The poor image of aged
care nursing arising from pay disparity, poor working conditions and lack of
access to education and training made it a less attractive option for graduates
and there was no guarantee that the new graduates would enter the aged care
sector. This concern was highlighted by Aged and Community Services SA &NT
which commented that in South Australia
in 2003, all registered nurse graduates were absorbed into the public health
system, private acute system or nursing agencies with no graduates entering
aged care as a professional choice.[63]
The aged care sector is a less popular area of practice and with competition
from other areas witnesses believed that the shortages would continue.[64]
2.55
It was also noted that demand for nursing staff was
increasing across the health spectrum. However, in the aged care sector factors
such as the increasing frailty of those entering residential aged care, the
increasing number of aged care places and the larger numbers of nurses facing
retirement because of the age profile of the aged care nursing workforce, means
that demand may be higher than other sectors. Providers will need to employ
larger numbers and more highly skilled registered nurses if the quality of care
is to be maintained.[65] However, the
Royal College of Nursing commented that the Budget initiatives focused on lower
level nursing education at the expense of specialist gerontological nursing
education.[66]
2.56
Clinical placements for undergraduates was another area
of concern. NSW Health argued that offering clinical placements in areas of
workforce demand such as rural, regional and outer metropolitan areas is
critical. The quality of the clinical placement experience impacts upon
recruitment, particularly in areas such as aged care. NSW Health stated that
the Commonwealth 'needs to acknowledge that clinical placements are
significantly under-funded through the education sector and that this
under-funding results in greater difficulties with recruitment and retention of
the workforce'.[67]
2.57
The Tasmanian Government also focussed on clinical
placements for undergraduates and noted that if students do not have a positive
experience whilst on placement in an aged care facility, they will be unlikely
to seek future employment in the sector. It argued that scholarships to support
work in aged care must be provided in conjunction with quality clinical
placements. This is particularly the case given that there is no obligation for
recipients to fulfil a period of employment in an aged care facility following
admittance to the Bachelor of Nursing degree.[68]
Articulation between nursing levels
2.58
The Commonwealth's response to the Hogan Review
provides for 4,500 additional vocational training places to be created each
year for aged care workers to improve quality of care and to provide better
career pathways for aged care workers. These places are aimed at assisting
15 750 aged care workers undertake vocational education training over the
next four years. The funding for vocational education and training will be
provided to eligible aged care providers to purchase the training directly.
DoHA noted that the initiative 'will be largely focused towards certificates
III and IV in aged care, with some possibility of training options for people
to do diplomas to reach enrolled nurse level'.[69]
2.59
The HSU noted that 80 per cent of the people who
directly look after residents in aged care are carers, not nurses.[70] The level of training of carers varies
significantly. The HSU stated that providers can and do use staff who have no
training in aged care, with some even working alone at night. One carer stated:
Personal carers come in and I cannot understand how on earth
they got their certificate. Their basic English is not very good and nor is
their understanding of looking after somebody. When you orientate them,
although they have just got their PC 3 certificate they do not even know how to
shower a person, how to wash them properly, how to toilet them properly or how
to transfer them properly. Yet these people are being put into aged care to
look after elderly people. There needs to be some sort of training outside
before you enter them into aged care.[71]
2.60
The Aged Care Lobby voiced similar concerns:
When you look at the personal carers it is easy to see why care
is not what it should be. Personal carers can go to do a TAFE course with year
10 qualifications. They have a 16-week course – seven weeks of lectures and
nine weeks of practical work – and they have to have a mature St John Ambulance
certificate at the end of the course. Is that adequate to provide someone with
the skills to look after elderly people...I suggest to you that that is the
problem in most aged care facilities: looking at the prerequisites that are
needed to look after elderly people.[72]
The HSU commented that the Commonwealth should 'move as
quickly as possible to put in place a requirement for all new staff entering
the industry to be qualified to an aged care certificate III standard'.[73]
2.61
In relation to helping care workers to upgrade to
enrolled nurses, the Queensland Government supported this initiative as it offers
a career pathway for unregulated workers into nursing and stated 'the backbone
of both the residential and community care workforces is 'unregulated'
workers'. Their access to pre and post employment training to Certificate III
and beyond was seen as a key issue that needs to be tackled as part of a
national strategy.[74]
2.62
Similarly, the ANF welcomed the funding initiative but
advocated that the funding be provided to registered training providers to
enable them to offer additional enrolled nursing courses. The ANF noted however
that obtaining the quality clinical placements essential to the enrolled
nursing qualification may present a significant difficulty. The ANF went on to
comment that it was concerned with the growing number of personal carers
accessing a Certificate IV qualification that does not lead to licensing as an
enrolled nurse. It stated that 'the licensing of people providing nursing care
is an important process that provides protection and recourse for the public
whose lives depend on those who are caring for them'.[75]
2.63
Geriaction stated that care workers often seek access
to enrolled nurse training. However places to do so are short and if they do
access a place 'they have to leave their current workplace, go to an acute care
environment and work rotating rosters, which is not consistent with family and
other work issues'. Geriaction concluded that:
There are some real barriers to access to those courses...I think
there is a need to look at the whole notion of teaching centres for aged care
where we develop centres of excellence, have training from multidisciplinary
people and develop relationships with universities...They engender the culture of
learning and research which is critical to keeping people in the discipline and
in the specialty itself.[76]
2.64
The Tasmanian Government commented that, while the
2004-05 Budget included measures for aged care education and training, it is
understood that education and training for workers in the residential aged care
will be paid direct to aged care providers to fund training for enrolled
nursing. Funding through normal VET system channels is preferred as it would
enable better strategic targeting of training to meet industry needs.[77] The HSU also called for greater
accountability mechanisms to be built into payments for providers to ensure an
agreed level of workforce training is provided in each aged care facility.[78]
2.65
The Queensland Government commented on pathways for
enrolled nurses to continue into registered nursing and other health
professions. It stated that 'for this to occur there would need to be
incentives for universities to offer articulation pathways which do not require
unnecessary duplication of previous training or unreasonably extend the number
of years students need to study'.[79]
2.66
During the Committee's 2002 inquiry into nursing,
witnesses commented on articulation. The ANF argued that formal articulation
and recognition of prior learning arrangements should be developed between
Certificate III courses for unlicensed nursing and personal care assistants
(however titled) and enrolled nurse courses. It was also stated that a possible
pathway could include the opportunity for students to enter as personal care
assistants through the TAFE sector. These students would then be offered the
opportunity to progress into an EN program and from then to a Licensed
Practical Nurse program (based on the US model where these nurses have a
specific role which is different from that of the RN), and then onto completion
of the program as a RN. The Committee recommended that formal articulation
arrangements and recognition of prior learning be developed between Certificate
III courses for unregulated healthcare workers and enrolled nurse courses, and
between courses for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health workers and
enrolled nurse courses.[80]
Enrolled nurse medication
management training
2.67
Enrolled nurses are able to administer certain
medication but must receive the relevant training. VAHEC stated that this
training cost approximately $3,000 per person and precluded some enrolled
nurses and providers from accessing training.[81]
2.68
The Commonwealth's initiative aims to assist 5 250
enrolled nurses to access training to allow them to administer medication. This
initiative was seen as overcoming a barrier to medication training and as a positive
step in improving the skills base of the aged care workforce. The funding would
ensure medication management was not relegated to a category of worker with no
pharmacology education. Medication management by enrolled nurses would also
allow more effective utilisation of registered nurses and allow 'sensible and
rational work practices to evolve based upon the capabilities of the various
categories of staff'.[82] It was also hoped
that this measure will enhance the enrolled nurse role and lead to more
enrolled nurses remaining in aged care.[83]
2.69
However, witnesses questioned whether the funding would
be adequate. They pointed to the Hogan Review's recommendation that the
Commonwealth should support aged care providers to assist at least 12 000
enrolled nurses to complete medication management training by 2007-08.[84] The Queensland Government stated that:
The Commonwealth Government's initiatives in promoting an aged
care workforce capable of meeting contemporary and future challenges, while
important and useful, operate in the absence of a clear strategic context. Thus
while initiatives directed to improving the medication management skills of
enrolled nurses are 'a positive', it is not known whether the numbers of
positions targeted have been based on the best available evidence of projected
need.[85]
Wage parity
We do not believe that the recent budget initiatives go far
enough in addressing wage parity issues. We are concerned that if we do not
actually address that problem it will ultimately impact – if it has not already
– on the actual quality of care being provided to people in residential care.[86]
No amount of education and training support will make up for the
lack of funding to provide comparative wages with the acute sector.[87]
2.70
Wage disparity between the aged care sector and other
areas of nursing was seen as a major impediment to recruitment and retention in
the aged care workforce. As noted above, wage disparity occurs in all jurisdictions.
There is disparity between the aged care sector and other health sectors,
between government and non-government facilities and at all workforce levels in
the aged care sector.
2.71
The Commonwealth's additional funding aimed to help
providers increase wages was made in two parts: in the 2002-03 Budget, funding over
four years for subsidy increases was provided; and in 2004-05 funding over four
years for conditional adjustment payment was provided.
2.72
Witnesses argued that the Commonwealth's additional
funding had failed to close the gap between wages in the aged care sector and
other health sectors. Two reasons were advanced for the failure of this
initiative. First, it was argued that the funding was not being directed
towards wages as there was no mechanism for ensuring that this in fact occurred.
Secondly, that the additional funding was insufficient to close the gap.
2.73
Without a mechanism to ensure that the funding went to
addressing the disparity in wages, nurses feared that the money would not be
used as intended but 'instead end up in the consolidated revenue of aged care
facilities'.[88] The NSW Nurses
Association stated:
Without extra conditions on the $877.8 million incentive payment
to mandate that service providers use the money to improve wages and conditions,
the NSW Nurses Association does not have any expectation that the employment
conditions for nurses in aged care will improve. It will not make any
difference in this budget, as it made no difference in previous budgets. Until
there is quarantined funding for nurses wages, it is unlikely that service
providers will pass on any extra funds.[89]
2.74
The HSU also noted that there is a significant wage gap
of $60 to $70 a week for carers between the public sector and the aged care
sector. The HSU stated that carers in public hospitals do far less than carers
in aged care.[90] HSU (NSW) voiced
concerns on behalf of its members that the conditional adjustment payment would
not be used to improve wages:
But I am not confident that they will respond in that manner. I
am not confident that they see that money as going towards staffing and
salaries and I do not believe there is anything in the budgetary measures that
actually locks them in and requires them to spend that money on staffing or
salaries. That is our concern.[91]
2.75
The ANF considered that the amounts provided in the
Budget provision were sufficient to achieve parity but were not being used to
do so:
The amounts that the government allocates are sufficient to
achieve parity. Both in the $877.8 million and previously in the
$211 million, the amounts were sufficient. It is just that they do not get
to wages because there is no mechanism or no requirement that they do so.[92]
The ANF argued that the providers 'were quite deliberately
depressing wages because it is a good reason to put pressure on the government
to give them more money'.[93] Witnesses
recommended that a mechanism be put in place that ensured that the additional
funding provided by the Commonwealth was directed at wages.[94]
2.76
As part of the eligibility requirements for the
conditional adjustment, providers are required to encourage staff to undertake
training, publish audited financial statements and participate in periodic
workforce surveys. The ANF indicated there were some difficulties with
providing audited statements in that some entities are part of a larger entity 'which
means it is impossible to differentiate'. The ANF stated that a working group
was 'trying to develop a format for what that reporting means and what will
actually be reported'. While it was hoped that would enable the allocation of funds
to be identified 'at the moment we do not have – and have not had since 1997 – any
way of telling how much providers are spending on particular things, and the
audited accounts do not give that detail at all'.[95]
2.77
Other witnesses argued that wage disparity would not
only continue but would increase as the additional funding was insufficient to
close the gap. The Tasmanian Government commented:
The Commonwealth Budget provided a welcome increase in the
subsidies paid for residential aged care, with a supplement of 1.75 per cent
being added annually for the next four years. However, this will generally not
be sufficient to enable aged care employers to pay wages that are competitive
with the public hospital sector. Linking aged care subsidies to an appropriate
index of health sector wages would achieve this, or alternatively, increasing
the supplementary payment. Until pay parity is achieved it will remain very
difficult for the current workforce issues in residential aged care to be
effectively addressed.[96]
2.78
CHA stated that its modelling of the conditional
adjustment payment would mean that there would still be a shortfall of around
$170 a week for a nurse working in an aged care facility as compared to a
hospital. CHA commented that 'because the aged care program is so heavily
reliant on government subsidy around the care funding, which goes to wages, and
because the overall operating budget is so significantly determined by wages,
the gap unfortunately is exacerbated'.[97]
2.79
UnitingCare stated that the current indexation system
resulted in inaccurate costing of wages in the sector. It gave the example of
one of its providers in Queensland
which faced wage rises of approximately 6 per cent per year over the last three
years, while indexation had been closer to 2.5 per cent.[98]
2.80
UnitingCare also noted that the 2004 Budget allocation
of $877.8 million over four years meant that the Commonwealth had agreed to
indexation totalling 3.76 per cent (1.75 per cent for the adjustment and 2.01
per cent indexation ) in the current financial year. UnitingCare concluded
that, while the increase in funding is welcome, 'the figures strongly suggest the
scope of the increase is not large enough to keep pace with annual cost
increases and:
The increase will certainly not provide sufficient funding to
redress the existing disparity of wages between the aged care and public
hospital sectors. The aged care sector is reaching the end of it's capacity to
absorb the disparity between funding and expenditure.[99]
2.81
The Aged and Community Services Association of NSW
& ACT also agreed that although the increased residential aged care
subsidies would 'go some way to alleviating the pressure for providers, it will
generally not be sufficient to enable aged care employers to pay wages that are
competitive with the public hospital sector'. The Association stated that
actual wage costs were rising faster than aged care subsidies. The formula for
the annual indexation of subsidies included only the amount of the safety net
wage adjustment. Industry pay rates have increased by significantly more than
the subsidy rates, driven in large part by wage settlements in the public
hospital sector. In addition, the Association argued that setting of a national
rate for the subsidy, did not take into account differences in wage rates
between jurisdictions. For example, nurse wages in NSW are 12 per cent more
than in any other jurisdiction.[100]
Community care
2.82
As noted above, the aged care community workforce has
grown rapidly in response to changes in policy direction. Witnesses commented
that the Commonwealth's initiatives tend to address residential aged care
workforce issues only. The Tasmanian Government commented that the initiatives
were inconsistent with the direction of government policy as programs emphasised
people remaining in their homes as long as possible and the focus is on
training funding in residential care.[101]
CHA believed that:
...there would be greater merit in bringing together the strategic
workforce issues affecting all aspects of aged care. This would provide a more
comprehensive and coordinated response which would address residential and
community care together with geriatric care in the acute sector.[102]
Workforce planning and the National
Aged Care Workforce Strategy
2.83
While there was support for the Commonwealth's
initiatives, they were seen as only addressing part of the problems facing the
aged care sector. The Tasmanian Government stated that while these initiatives
are useful in their own right, they tend to focus on the residential aged care
workforce and neglect strategic issues confronting the aged care sector as a
whole. Community care workforce issues, in particular, merit further attention.[103] Geriaction saw the initiatives as
'bandaid measures', which failed to address the need for a comprehensive
workforce planning strategy.
2.84
The need for a long term and national approach to
workforce planning was supported by other evidence.[104] For example, the Queensland
Government commented that there is a case for the development and
implementation of a coherent national workforce plan to deal with immediate and
medium term workforce challenges. In doing so, the Queensland Government stated
that the Commonwealth and State and Territory Governments will need to work
closely in partnership with professional associations and education/training
providers in the development of a national approach. The Government noted that
the Council of Australian Governments (COAG) recently agreed to the development
of a health workforce plan and stated that work on an aged care workforce plan
could usefully occur in tandem with this work.[105]
2.85
NSW Health also argued that greater collaboration
between all parties involved in the training of our health workforce is
critical to ensure it is truly patient focused. It considered that a team-based
approach to learning, across and within professions, needs to be fostered in
the education sector and reinforced in the workplace. This is particularly
important in care of the aged where coordination of professional effort can
result in significantly improved health outcomes.[106]
2.86
NCOSS stated that commented, in relation to community
care:
...we all know of the shortages that are emerging in aged and
community care services and the desperate need – beyond perhaps some of the
shorter-term measures that have been taken in recent times by governments at the
Commonwealth and state levels – to have a much longer-term approach to work
force development dealing with skill shortages and looking at the growth areas
within these industries, broadly speaking.[107]
2.87
In April 2005, the Minister for Ageing launched the National Aged Care Workforce Strategy.
In doing so the Minister stated that:
There are strategies to deal with workforce supply, education
and training, recruitment and retention issues, the image of aged care, so that
we can promote aged care across all age sectors, as a career of choice...[it]
will take this sector forward, and add much to the maturity of the aged care
sector, and our ability to attract and retain and reward aged care
professionals.[108]
2.88
Although the Strategy was launched toward the end of
the Committee's inquiry, some witnesses provided comments. Both VAHEC and ACS
Australia welcomed the Strategy, but suggested that its scope should be
extended to include community care. ACS Australia indicated that it had raised
the matter with DoHA and 'that is
something that they now support, perhaps for the next iteration of the
strategy, which is a welcome development from our point of view'.[109]
2.89
The AMA stated it was disappointed that the Strategy
and the National Aged Care Workforce Census did not consider medical
practitioners to be part of the aged care workforce. The AMA commented 'general
practitioners are the backbone of the health service in this country, yet GP
participation in residential aged care facilities has declined'.[110]
2.90
The Australian Physiotherapy Association also commented
that the Strategy had not addressed its important place in the aged care
sector:
We struggled to get the very important role of physiotherapy in
the aged care sector recognised in the way that it should be...the remit that
they had been given by the government or by the department did not allow them
to include those comments. During those meetings I had terrific support from
the other health professionals who were there as to the importance of
physiotherapy in the sector, but we faced this blank refusal to acknowledge
that physiotherapists are a core component of the aged care workforce. There
seemed to be no logic, and there was no reason or rationale offered; it was
simply stated that this was the limit of the study and that was all that would
be examined.[111]
2.91
VAHEC raised the issue of funding and the need for
cooperation:
There are also issues, once again, about who will pay for this.
It also emphasises the cooperation that will be needed between both levels of
government, particularly with regard to the state government addressing some of
the barriers we currently experience in recruiting and retaining staff.[112]
2.92
HSU was particularly critical, noting that there was
little detail and did not address significant issues:
Without trying to be too critical, having read through that
document I could not understand one thing that it was actually proposing in a
concrete sense. It appeared to me to be incredibly general. It did not address
any of the issues that we have tried to bring to the Senate's attention today
and in our submissions. We ask: how can you ever have some sort of workforce
planning document that does not come to terms with the very basic question of how
many staff you need to adequately look after people in an aged care facility?
That document certainly did not do that at all.[113]
The lack of concrete indication of need was echoed by the Mary
Ogilvy Homes which stated 'in this document there does not seem to have been
any formal sort of gap analysis'. [114] The HSU concluded that it was 'a
lost opportunity' and that:
We do not even see it as a good step in the first direction,
because we do not see that it has set any direction at all in that particular
document. We are very critical of the lost opportunity that could have been
taken by the committee in that particular document.[115]
Conclusion
2.93
In its conclusion on aged care workforce issues, the
Committee can but reiterate what has been said many times before: that the
shortage of nurses is real, is increasing and is impacting on the quality of
care being delivered in all health sectors but more particularly in the aged
care sector. The shortage of nurses will continue and become more severe as the
impact of an ageing workforce is felt and if the number of graduates is
insufficient to replace those retiring. Shortages of medical practitioners and
allied health professionals in the aged care sector are also evident. The
shortages in all professions across the sector will increase as demand for a
skilled aged care workforce increases as the general population ages.
2.94
The Committee acknowledges that the Commonwealth and
the State and Territory Governments have instituted programs and initiatives to
address the shortages. However, the evidence continues to indicate that more
needs to be done. There is a need for greater coordination of workforce planning
and greater coordination between governments and the tertiary sector. In
relation to aged care nursing, the Committee considers that the Commonwealth
should re-examine the recommendations of the Hogan Review on the number of
undergraduate nursing places required with a focus on aged care. However, the
Committee is mindful that there is still a need to improve the image of the
aged care sector, and more particularly to reach pay parity to encourage new
graduates to remain in aged care nursing. Without this, the Government's
efforts to increase the aged care workforce will be ineffective.
2.95
The National Aged
Care Workforce Strategy has been launched in an effort to address the needs
of the aged care workforce. While a welcome first step, the Committee is
disappointed that after so many years of reports and reviews, the Strategy is limited
in scope as it is directed at residential aged care and does not encompass all
areas of the aged care workforce. The Committee finds this a particularly disappointing
aspect of the Strategy given the Commonwealth's policies aimed at keeping older
people in their homes for as long as possible. The Strategy also does not
include all professions engaged in the aged care sector. While it is noted in
the introduction to the Strategy that work will be needed to broaden the
strategic response to cover the full aged care workforce in all settings, the
Committee considers that the limited focus of the Strategy is yet another
example of where a great deal of work has failed to provide a comprehensive, cohesive
and coordinated approach to a significant problem. It is not that residential
care is the only area where there are workforce shortages, all areas face
difficulties. Strategies to increase the number of skilled workers, be they
nurses or other health professions, will take a number of years to impact. In
the interim, the significant workforce difficulties in the sector may remain.
2.96
More importantly, the Strategy does not identify who
will take a leadership role to ensure that the strategies are progressed and
implemented. While there are areas of responsibility without commitment and
leadership at the highest levels by all governments, the Committee is concerned
that the Strategy will fail to deliver much needed reforms in the aged care
sector.
Recommendation 1
2.97 The Commmittee welcomes
the Commonwealth's allocation of 400 extra nursing places at universities
in the 2004-05 Budget. However, the Committee recommends that the Commonwealth
further increase the number of undergraduate nursing places at Australian
universities to 1000 as recommended by the Hogan Review.
Recommendation 2
2.98 That the Commonwealth work with aged care providers to ensure that their
shared responsibility to assist enrolled nurses to complete medication
management training meets the target as recommended by the Hogan Review.
Recommendation 3
2.99 That the Commonwealth implement a strategy which allocates an appropriate
number of undergraduate nursing places on the basis that recruitment for those
places occurs from the current residential and community care workforce in both
rural and urban settings proportionally.
Recommendation 4
2.100 That the Commonwealth investigate the effectiveness of incentives for
staff to work in aged care settings in rural and remote areas.
Recommendation 5
2.101 That the Commonwealth,
as a matter of priority, expand the National Aged Care Workforce Strategy to
encompass the full aged care workforce, including medical and allied health
professionals, and all areas of the aged care sector, in particular the
community care sector.
Recommendation 6
2.102 That the Department of Health and Ageing and the Department of Education,
Science and Training, as part of the National Aged Workforce Strategy, ensure
the inclusion of quality aged care curricula in undergraduate nursing.
Recommendation 7
2.103 That the Commonwealth
consider implementing mechanisms to ensure that the conditional adjustment
payment aimed at restoring wage parity for nurses, personal carers and other
staff in the aged care workforce is used to meet this aim.
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