![Doctors and nurses urge government to act to prevent more COVID-19 cases in aged care. Doctors and nurses urge government to act to prevent more COVID-19 cases in aged care.](/images/transform/v1/crop/frm/zFAiTDuEg3GdzaaJJ3MGNK/bc61fe52-4012-4e20-bae4-12af1d6ba035.jpg/r0_98_1920_1182_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg)
Doctors and nurses are calling on the Federal Government to take urgent action to prevent further COVID-19 outbreaks in aged care.
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They have warned that hotspots could appear in any state or territory and have proposed a raft of measures including mandatory staff to patient ratios, a mandated skill mix, with registered nurse presence ensured 24/7; adequate access to PPE, training in infection control, and reviewing of infection control procedures.
Australian Medical Association president, Omar Khorshid, and Australian Nursing and Midwifery Federation federal secretary, Annie Butler, have written to Prime Minister Scott Morrison to express their concerns about the ongoing impact of the pandemic on aged care residents and staff.
More than 630 of Australia's 850-plus COVID-19 deaths have been in aged care.
"It's almost a year to the day since the AMA and the ANMF launched a joint campaign, calling on the Federal Government to act immediately to guarantee quality and safety in aged care," Dr Khorshid said. "We called our campaign Care Can't Wait.
"That was four months before the global pandemic began to affect Australia. COVID-19 took the world by surprise, but its effects on the aged care system were entirely predictable."
In the letter, Dr Khorshid and Ms Butler say that recent increased funding will go some way towards enabling people to stay in their homes for longer, and increase infection control for those in nursing homes, but they remain concerned that the sector is still vulnerable, and that members working in aged care face unacceptable risks of contracting the virus.
Ms Butler said that even before the COVID-19 outbreak, the aged care royal commission had exposed the true severity of the significant and systemic problems in the system.
"It has suffered from chronic and widespread understaffing over many years and a lack of transparency in how funding has been spent, which is reflected in all aspects of nursing home operations and the standard of care being provided," Ms Butler said.
"There are too few nurses working in aged care, and nursing homes are overly reliant on lesser trained workers, placing unreasonable expectations on them to ensure safe care.
"Our members have trouble accessing adequate personal protective equipment, and not enough attention is being paid to basic infection control systems and processes.
"Rather than waiting for the royal commission's final report, the Government must act now to resolve these problems, stop unnecessary suffering and save lives."
The two peak bodies are also calling for:
- The immediate establishment of the nationally-agreed Aged Care Health Emergency Response Operations Centres (ACERC) to help prevent outbreaks
- National paid pandemic leave arrangements
- Increased funding for home care packages, and
- More transparency and accountability in how aged care providers spend Government funding.