Google AI
The Times Australia

Times Media

Morrison announces bonus of up to $800 to encourage workers to stay in highly stretched aged care system

  • Written by: Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra

With COVID deaths in aged care mounting and reports of neglect of residents due to acute workforce shortages, Scott Morrison on Monday announced bonus payments totalling up to $800 for staff.

Two payments of up to $400 each will be made on a pro rata basis, according to hours worked. The first payment will be provided next month, with a second by early May. The cost will be $209 million.

A main aim of the payment is to try to encourage qualified workers to stay in the system.

Both workers, who are low paid, and facilities have again been hit hard in recent weeks, as Omicron has raged. Aged care residents were early casualties of the pandemic, with many hundreds of deaths in Victoria in 2020. Now they are again in the frontline of casualties. In January some 447 people in residential aged care have died with COVID.

Staff shortages have been acute in the sector during Omicron with many workers having COVID or furloughed because of being close contacts. There have been reports of residents missing showers and meals being delayed, and many families are not able to visit when facilities have outbreaks.

On Monday NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet expressed concern about the significant number of aged care deaths. NSW Chief Health Officer Kerry Chant stressed the need for residents to receive their boosters and Perrottet offered state support to get the jabs finalised.

Aged care is a federal government responsibility.

Announcing the bonus, Morrison said none of Australia’s health outcomes “would be possible without the hard work, long hours and dedicated care offered by our frontline health and aged care workforce.

"Their resilience over the past two years has been inspiring.”

Morrison said the latest commitment built on the $393 million provided over three payments to 234,000 aged care workers earlier in the pandemic.

The payment will be for workers in government-subsidised home care and to aged care workers providing direct care, food or cleaning services in government-subsidised residential care.

Health Minister Greg Hunt said on Monday that about 99% of aged care facilities were expected to have had their boosters available by the end of the day, with the rest in “coming days”.

Hunt said 60% of the aged care deaths were people who were receiving palliative care.

He said there was a 99% vaccination rate among aged care staff (this means two shots).

Anthony Albanese said at the weekend the government should be supporting an increase in wages for age care workers in the case currently before the Fair Work Commission.

Read more https://theconversation.com/morrison-announces-bonus-of-up-to-800-to-encourage-workers-to-stay-in-highly-stretched-aged-care-system-176029

Times Magazine

Will Travis Kelce follow the athlete silicone ring trend?

From the NFL to the All Blacks, professional athletes have been ditching metal for silicone rings. W...

The AI economy: How artificial intelligence is creating the jobs of tomorrow in Australia

Artificial intelligence has become one of the most discussed technologies of the decade, often acc...

Yoga and Tai Chi: Why Simple Movement Still Inspires Millions

In a world of high-intensity workouts, fitness technology and ever-changing exercise trends, two a...

Technology

Why Australian Enterprises Are Reth…

The corporate landscape in Australia has undergone a permanent structural shift over the past few ...

Local News

QLD Day

On Saturday 6 June, parkrun events across the state will be a sea of maroon, with communities  str...

Culture

Measles in Australia: Why This Highly Contagi…

Measles was once considered a childhood illness that had largely disappeared from Australia. Thank...

Travel

Byron Bay with Friends: Forget the Camping Ge…

There is something special about packing the car on a Friday afternoon and heading away with frien...

The Times Features

Vacuum cleaners: from the Hoover to the robot revolutio…

For much of the past century, the vacuum cleaner was one of the least-changed appliances in the ho...

When you sell your life's work: how capital gains …

For many Australians, an investment property is the most familiar example of a capital gains tax e...

Where do cautious Australians invest? A guide to the ma…

For generations, Australians have been encouraged to invest for the future. The challenge is that ...