Monday, 13 Jan 2025

More than 50,000 older Australians died while waiting for approved home care since 2017, data shows

More than 50,000 older Australians died while waiting for approved home care since 2017, data shows


More than 50,000 older Australians died while waiting for approved home care since 2017, data shows
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More than 50,000 older Australians have died while on the waiting list for home care in recent years, data which Labor says shows the system is still in crisis.

The federal government last year announced a major package to alleviate the pressure on home care and cut the number of people who have been approved for a home care package but are still waiting to receive it.

Government data shows the time people spend on the waiting list, known as the National Priority System, is still significantly high despite substantial improvements in recent years. Those funded for the highest level of support are still waiting on average six to nine months for their approved package, down from 12 months or more in 2020.

The data also shows that, despite the improvements, thousands of older Australians on the NPS are still dying before receiving their approved home care.

In the last six months of 2021, 3,802 people on the NPS died before receiving the home care package they had been approved for. More than 8,000 died in the 2020-21 financial year, and 10,563 died in 2019-20. All up, more than 50,000 older Australians have died while waiting for home care since 2017-18.

There is no suggestion the deaths were caused by the delays to home care and the government says it would be misleading to draw any causal link. Senior health officials also say the number of deaths is proportionate to the general rate of deaths in the community for older age cohorts.

The Coalition has accused Labor of announcing nothing on home care, while pointing to its own funding of 80,000 home care packages in the last budget.

The new packages are coming online progressively until 2023 and are helping to reduce the waiting list.

But while the funding is largely welcomed by the sector, peak bodies have repeatedly warned that a significant staffing crisis is hampering the actual delivery of funded services.

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