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New aged care staffing quality indicators to improve health and wellbeing

Department of Health

The Australian Government is introducing 3 new staffing quality indicators to the ³Ô¹ÏÍøÕ¾ Aged Care Mandatory Quality Indicator Program in residential aged care, focused on enrolled nursing, allied health and lifestyle assistants.

Quality indicators measure critical areas of care that can affect the health and wellbeing of aged care residents.

This helps the government and residential aged care providers to monitor and improve the quality of services for older people.

The new staffing indicators recognise the crucial role of staff in providing high-quality care.

Providers will start collecting data for these new indicators from 1 April 2025 and report the data by 21 July 2025. Residential aged care providers must report on quality indicators for each resident every 3 months.

Their introduction will expand the number of indicators for residential aged care from 11 to 14. This approach ensures the right mix of transparency, accountability and practicality to ensure the continual improvement of residential aged care services.

Quotes attributable to Minister for Aged Care, Anika Wells:

“The Albanese Government’s reforms are continuing to lift the standard of aged care. These new quality indicators recognise the value nurses, allied health and lifestyle officers bring to aged care residents.”

“While it’s great to see improvements across the sector, our work continues to lift the quality of residential aged care in Australia. The new staffing quality indicators put the focus on key roles that support health and wellbeing.”

“We are determined to ensure older people have high-quality care that safeguards their health and wellbeing as they age. Quality indicators are one important way we achieve this.”

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