The capabilities and performance of the Aged Care Quality and Safety Commission (Commission) were reviewed last year with the results published in July 2023 in the Final Report – Independent Capability Review of the Aged Care Quality and Safety Commission. The Final Report made 32 recommendations for reform of the Commission.
In June 2024, the Minister for Aged Care announced that the Government accepts and will implement all 32 recommendations. In this article we summarise the review, the recommendations and the next steps for the Commission.
The aim of the review was to assess the Commission’s performance by examining its “strengths, opportunities and weaknesses, and the extent to which these inhibit or enable a high-performing, contemporary, best practice regulator”.
According to the Final Report, “The Commission is taking important steps to ensure that it evolves into a high performing regulator. There is much to build from, and I commend the work of the Commissioner, her team and staff across the organisation for these steps. However, it is clear that there is much more to be done”.
The Final Report identified several areas where the Commission needed to improve, in many cases as a “matter of urgency”. You can read each of the 32 specific recommendations at pages 10-13 of the report, but for now here is a summary of the key areas.
The Commission needs to fix its organisational structure, senior leadership, and internal governance. This includes:
The Commission must fix significant problems in its complaints process and Serious Incident Response Scheme (SIRS). This includes:
The Commission must “improve transparency and accountability by sharing information, engaging more openly and working with providers”. Specifically:
The report recommended that “a resourcing model be developed that includes for some functions a funding mechanism that sees its appropriation revenue directly determined by estimated workloads, which can be adjusted
throughout each year based on actual workload – a demand-driven mechanism”.
In June 2024 the Government issued its official response to the Final Report, which included a commitment to implement all 32 recommendations. According to this response, “six recommendations have been completed and by the end of 2024, the majority of recommendations will be delivered. Delivery timeframes are aligned with the existing aged care reform agenda and the Government’s budget cycle”.
However, given that proposed major reforms to the Aged Care Act were recently postponed from 1 July 2024 to 1 July 2025, it’s wise to assume that the 32 reforms to the Aged Care Quality and Safety Commission will be similarly delayed, and that we are likely to see them rolled out gradually across 2024 and into the first half of 2025.