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Home > Ministers > The Hon Justine Elliot MP, Minister for Ageing > Media Hub > Psychogeriatric Research Grants Psychogeriatric Research GrantsPDF printable version of Psychogeriatric Research Grants (PDF 31 KB)
Mrs Elliot said the research grants and the recommendations in the ‘Murnane Report’ are important in improving the care and services available to older Australians in aged care homes suffering with mental health problems. “Our medical and clinical information knowledge base grows with each new research finding, clinical practice guideline and treatment approach. In the case of behaviour management practices, it is vitally important that this new information is translated into clinical practice in the aged care sector as quickly as possible,” Mrs Elliot said. “I will continue to work with my State and Territory colleagues to ensure we address the challenges facing our most frail and vulnerable people in our nation’s aged care homes. “We have an ageing population and working together now to improve services and care strategies will pay dividends for generations of Australians to come,” Mrs Elliot said. Across Australia, there are 200,000 Australians affected by dementia including about one in four people aged 85 years and over. This is expected to double in the next 20 years as Australia’s population ages. The recommendations contained in the report include: 1. Maintain appropriate support to people with psychogeriatric disorders as an important issue for senior level aged care administrators and planners by establishing an expert group comprising old age psychiatrists, service providers and expert nursing staff to report to the Ministerial Conference on Ageing at its regular meetings. 2. Develop principles of effective care and support including protocols for effective collaboration across the residential aged care and State mental health systems. 3. Establish evidence-based guidelines on effective care and behaviour management for residential aged care services which would include strategies for maintaining networks across the broader service system. 4. Nurture and establish collaborative networks across the primary, acute, mental health and aged care service sectors. 5. Promote leadership in the sector by encouraging leading residential aged care providers to take a proactive role. 6. Consider possibilities provided under the Aged Care Act 1997 to extend and strengthen care to this client group. 7. Expand current workforce training strategies which could include, as an early target, training in managing aggressive and sexually inappropriate behaviour. 8. Encourage GP training and access by engaging with the Australian General Practice Network, General Practice Education and Training, Royal Australian College of General Practitioners and Australian Medical Association to encourage more focus on the needs of people with behavioural problems and/or dementia both in terms of training for GPs and providing onsite support to clients within facilities. 9. Facilitate ‘progression’ models of care through ongoing discussion with residents, relatives and staff to enable progression from and to specialist care in a high dependency unit as required. For more information, contact Minister Elliot's office on (02) 6277 7280
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