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Reform and reverberation: Australian aged care policy changes and the unintended consequences for allied health.

Diane GibsonStephen T Isbel
Published in: Australian occupational therapy journal (2024)
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.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • palliative care
  • mental health
  • quality improvement
  • public health
  • affordable care act
  • pain management
  • air pollution
  • transcription factor
  • risk assessment
  • smoking cessation
  • hepatitis c virus
  • hiv infected