New Era in Aged Care Begins with First Quality and Safety Commissioner Announced

Today marks a significant milestone in the journey towards a better, safer aged care system, with Australia’s first aged care quality and safety Commissioner appointed to lead the new and independent Aged Care Quality and Safety Commission.

Highly respected and experienced health sector leader Janet Anderson will oversee establishment of the Commission, as it prepares to start intensified compliance monitoring from 1 January 2019.

The new Commission will have a budget of almost $300 million over four years, employing dozens of additional senior compliance officers.

While the Royal Commission into the aged care sector undertakes its critical review, the formation of the Quality and Safety Commission highlights our Government’s absolute commitment to continuing reform.

The new Commission will immediately integrate and streamline the roles of the current Aged Care Complaints Commissioner and the Australian Aged Care Quality Agency.

From January 2020, it will also incorporate the Department of Health’s aged care compliance responsibilities.

The new Commission is a key part of the Australian Government’s response to the recommendations of the Carnell-Paterson review of failures at the Oakden Older Persons Mental Health Service in South Australia. A Bill to establish the Commission is currently in Parliament.

Ms Anderson will oversee the approval, accreditation, assessment, complaints resolution, monitoring and compliance of Commonwealth-funded aged care providers, reporting directly to the Minister for Senior Australians and Aged Care.
Her appointment and the independent Commission will help usher in a new era in certainty, accountability and confidence in aged care in Australia.

Unannounced re-accreditation audits - which have been law since 1 July and cover all legislated quality and safety standards - are set to jump from 263 this year to almost 900 in 2019.

Unannounced inspections, targeting particular standards, identified risk factors and complaints, are expected to rise to more than 3,000.

There will be $48.2 million specifically to expand monitoring and compliance teams, continue unannounced inspections, better identify sub-standard care and to develop options for a Serious Incident Response Scheme. The Commission will be a one-stop shop for aged care residents, their families and aged care providers on aged care quality and safety matters.

Senior Australians and their families will know who to contact when they need help with a complaint, a concern or when something goes wrong. They will know that the aged care system is safe and will support their choices, rather than make choices for them.

Providers will also benefit from being able to deal with one regulatory agency, and know who to contact in relation to their accreditation, quality monitoring and compliance requirements.

Establishment of the new Commission is part of our Government’s record aged care funding boost, with the recent Federal Budget increasing aged care spending by
$5 billion.

Ms Anderson has extensive management experience, particularly in the health sector, including leadership roles at State, Territory and Commonwealth levels.

She was First Assistant Secretary, Health Services, in the Commonwealth Department of Health 2012-2015, and Director, Inter-Government and funding Strategies in the New South Wales Department of Health 2006-2011.

For the past two years, Ms Anderson has held the positions of Deputy Chief Executive and acting Chief Executive of the Northern Territory Department of Health.

In 2009, she was awarded the Public Service Medal for outstanding work in health policy development and reform.

She will be assisted by aged care medical expert Associate Professor Michael Murray, who is working as the new interim Chief Clinical Advisor to support key establishment activities.

Associate Professor Murray has a broad range of management, clinical and clinical teaching experience in aged care as the medical director of Continuing Care and head of Geriatric Medicine at Austin Health, Melbourne.

He is also the President of the Board of Directors at the National Ageing Research Institute, Associate Professor at Melbourne University and Adjunct Associate Professor Australian Centre for Evidence Based Aged Care and La Trobe University.

The permanent appointment of a clinical advisor to the Commission will be a matter for the new Commissioner.

In the lead up to the launch of the new Commission on 1 January, anyone who has concerns over the quality of aged care or services should contact the Aged Care Complaints Commissioner on 1800 550 552 or go to www.agedcarecomplaints.gov.au .

/Public Release. This material from the originating organization/author(s) may be of a point-in-time nature, edited for clarity, style and length. The views and opinions expressed are those of the author(s). View in full here.