House debates

Monday, 13 October 2008

Ministerial Statements

Indigenous Aged Care

3:43 pm

Photo of Justine ElliotJustine Elliot (Richmond, Australian Labor Party, Minister for Ageing) Share this | Hansard source

by leave—Members of this chamber will recall that on 22 September the Australian government announced details of a plan to improve the long-term quality of Indigenous aged care. That plan includes setting for the first time an independent set of quality standards applied to the national Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander flexible aged-care program services and a $46.2 million program to support care staff and management, provide locum relief and improve facilities as well as carry out emergency works.

In addition, the government also announced an independent assessment into the Department of Health and Ageing’s handling of the Docker River flexible Aboriginal aged-care service. On 14 June 2007, Dulcie Brumby, 70, an Indigenous resident with dementia living at Docker River flexible aged-care, died as a result of severe burns after falling into an open pit fire. This was an appalling tragedy, and I again express my condolences to the Brumby family. The independent assessment is now underway and I understand the Aged Care Commissioner, Ms Rhonda Parker, has already visited Docker River.

In Australia there are 29 nursing homes with a significant Indigenous population and 30 Indigenous-specific flexible services, providing in total about 700 places. The Australian government has recognised the vulnerability of isolated Indigenous-specific aged-care services and the difficulties facing them. We must improve the quality of Indigenous aged care. We want proper care for older Indigenous people, whilst recognising, respecting and maintaining the important cultural requirements. We will continue to consult with and take the advice of Indigenous communities and the Indigenous aged-care sector.

I would also like to take this opportunity to further update the parliament on my plans for improved Indigenous aged care and some recent developments. This week the Australian government will begin to conduct national quality site visits to all 30 flexible Indigenous-specific aged-care services so it can identify safety risks and the need for emergency works. The quality site visits will examine the level of care, overall safety, appropriateness of staffing levels and governance. Early next year the Department of Health and Ageing will work with each service to implement a building and maintenance action plan. In addition, the federal government will fund fire protection devices where elders may gather around traditional open fire pits at Indigenous-specific aged-care services.

On a final note I would like to inform the chamber of a visit last Thursday to the Northern Territory. I visited two Indigenous-specific aged-care services with the federal opposition shadow minister for ageing, the member for McPherson. It was a bipartisan visit. We visited the Kalano flexible aged-care residential service near Katherine and a respite aged-care service at Mutitjulu, near Uluru. We had the privilege to see the services firsthand, meet residents and speak to aged-care workers and volunteers.

The Kalano service provides 18 low-care residential places and the Mutitjulu respite service provides respite for up to 25 older people and 25 carers. At Mutitjulu the older women, speaking in Pitjantjatjara, told me, through an interpreter, about their needs—and we will be responding to those needs. The visit was about listening and learning and seeing how to improve the services. I hope that we will continue to work together with the opposition on Indigenous aged care.

I ask leave of the House to move a motion to enable the member for McPherson to speak for four minutes.

Leave granted.

I move:

That so much of the standing and sessional orders be suspended as would prevent Mrs May speaking for a period not exceeding four minutes.

Question agreed to.

Comments

No comments