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It looks like changes are happening in the aged care sector, pay rises leading to productivity improvements, maybe.
Southern Cross Care Tasmania, which runs nine residential care facilities, has announced a new "household model" of care, which involves catering, lifestyle and leisure staff also caring directly for residents.
Three Southern Cross Care Tasmania facilities have been issued with notices for failing to comply with minimum aged care standards in recent years, including one in August this year.
CEO Robyn Boyd said the organisation's facilities now meet all minimum standards for compliance and that the changes announced today were a direct response to last year's recommendations from the national Royal Commission into Aged Care.
She said the overhaul would provide opportunities for workers — as well as efficiencies for the not-for-profit organisation, which has been making successive losses.
The job descriptions of 175 members of staff — out of the organisation's 1,200 workers in total — will change but Ms Boyd said it was committed to retaining the same total number of staff.
The organisation says it will offer voluntary redundancies and redeployments, including to enrolled nurses whose roles are no longer being funded by the federal government.
Registered nurses and clinical care coordinators would "remain front and centre" in the new model of care, Southern Cross said.
Current catering staff will be asked to complete a Certificate III in aged care.
Union alarm over aged care provider's overhaul, with caterers to become carers
A major change in the way Southern Cross Care provides care at its nine Tasmanian aged care sites is labelled 'diabolical' by the union which fears a reduction of skilled workers, and vital services being abolished.
www.abc.net.au
Three Southern Cross Care Tasmania facilities have been issued with notices for failing to comply with minimum aged care standards in recent years, including one in August this year.
CEO Robyn Boyd said the organisation's facilities now meet all minimum standards for compliance and that the changes announced today were a direct response to last year's recommendations from the national Royal Commission into Aged Care.
She said the overhaul would provide opportunities for workers — as well as efficiencies for the not-for-profit organisation, which has been making successive losses.
The job descriptions of 175 members of staff — out of the organisation's 1,200 workers in total — will change but Ms Boyd said it was committed to retaining the same total number of staff.
The organisation says it will offer voluntary redundancies and redeployments, including to enrolled nurses whose roles are no longer being funded by the federal government.
Registered nurses and clinical care coordinators would "remain front and centre" in the new model of care, Southern Cross said.
Current catering staff will be asked to complete a Certificate III in aged care.