Centre for Ageing Research and Translation, Faculty of Health, University of Canberra, Bruce, Australia.
Aust Occup Ther J. 2024 Jun;71(3):392-407. doi: 10.1111/1440-1630.12953. Epub 2024 May 7.
Allied health has a valuable role in providing services to people living in residential aged care. The recent Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety included several important recommendations relating to the nursing, personal care, and allied health workforce and the care that they provide. The purpose of this paper is to review these recommendations and the Australian Government's policy responses and explore the emerging changes in allied health service provision in residential aged care.
Data from the four available Quarterly Financial Reports from the 2022-2023 financial year were extracted and analysed in relation to staff costs and time per person per day across personal care, nursing, and allied health workers. Supplementary data sources including the 2020 Aged Care Workforce Census were accessed to provide contextual data relating to individual allied health professions, including occupational therapy.
The analysis shows a modest increase in median registered nurse minutes per person per day, and cost per person per day, from the first to second quarter, and again in the third and fourth. By contrast, median time and cost for allied health declined. From 5.6 minutes per person per day in the first quarter, reported allied health minutes fell to 4.6 minutes per person per day in the second quarter, an 18% decrease, and by the fourth quarter was 4.3 minutes per person per day. This is just over half the Australian average of 8 minutes reported to the RCACQS in 2019.
Under recent residential aged care reforms, aged care providers have regulatory incentives to concentrate their financial resources on meeting the mandated care hours for registered nurses, enrolled nurses, personal care workers, and assistants in nursing. These same reforms do not mandate minutes of allied health services. Although providers of residential aged care in Australia continue to employ and value allied health, we argue that mandating care minutes for personal and nursing care without mandating the provision of allied health creates a perverse incentive whereby access to allied health services is unintentionally reduced.
在为居住在养老院的老年人提供服务方面,辅助医疗有其重要作用。最近的老年护理质量和安全皇家委员会提出了几项与护理、个人护理和辅助医疗保健人员以及他们提供的护理有关的重要建议。本文旨在审查这些建议和澳大利亚政府的政策回应,并探讨在养老院提供辅助医疗服务方面出现的新变化。
从 2022-2023 财年的四份可用季度财务报告中提取并分析了与个人护理、护理和辅助医疗保健人员的每人每天的员工成本和时间有关的数据。还查阅了包括 2020 年老年护理人员普查在内的补充数据源,以提供与职业治疗等个别辅助医疗职业相关的背景数据。
分析表明,注册护士的人均每天服务时间和成本中位数,从第一季度到第二季度略有增加,第三和第四季度再次增加。相比之下,辅助医疗的人均服务时间和成本则下降。从第一季度的每人每天 5.6 分钟,报告的辅助医疗时间减少到第二季度的每人每天 4.6 分钟,下降了 18%,到第四季度,每人每天为 4.3 分钟。这略高于澳大利亚在 2019 年向 RCACQS 报告的平均 8 分钟的一半。
在最近的养老院改革下,养老院提供者有监管激励措施,将其财务资源集中用于满足注册护士、注册护师、个人护理人员和护理助理的规定护理时间。这些改革并没有规定辅助医疗服务的时间。虽然澳大利亚养老院的提供者继续雇佣和重视辅助医疗,但我们认为,在没有规定提供辅助医疗服务的情况下,规定个人和护理护理的时间会产生一种不当的激励,从而无意中减少了获得辅助医疗服务的机会。