Talk to us

CathNews, the most frequently visited Catholic website in Australia, is your daily news service featuring Catholics and Catholicism from home and around the world, Mass on Demand and on line, prayer, meditation, reflections, opinion, and reviews. And, what's more - it's free!

Alex Lynch and Laura Haylen (CHA)

Catholic Health Australia says the passage of the Aged Care Act yesterday lays the foundation for a better and more sustainable aged care system that acts on the key recommendations of the Royal Commission into Aged Care.

“We welcome this seminal reform which will help deliver quality and sustainable aged care for all Australians, whether they live in a city, regional town or rural area,” Laura Haylen, CHA’s director of aged care policy, said.

“Aged care providers can now move to a sustainable footing and start to look at expanding operations where there is unmet need, particularly among vulnerable and marginalised communities,” Ms Haylen said.

CHA had long called for aged care funding reforms that would allow providers to operate sustainably and keep serving their communities.

It successfully advocated for key changes to the bill on behalf of its 350 aged care members and the sector more broadly, including protections to help ensure providers retain a skilled and dedicated workforce.

CHA’s focus now turns to the critical transition phase as these reforms are implemented.

“Providers and older Australians will need time to adapt to the reforms in a staged way, particularly with regard to home care,” Alex Lynch, director of CHA’s public health and in-home support policy, said.

“We will continue to advocate for transitional arrangements through the Aged Care Transition Taskforce and consultation on subordinate legislation.”

Not-for-profit Catholic providers will be represented on the transition taskforce by CHA’s deputy chair and chair of Catholic Healthcare, Steve Teulan.

FULL STORY

Catholic Health Australia welcomes passage of Aged Care Act (CHA)