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Both ACSA and LASA hit back at Minister for Ageing, Mark Butler, claiming $140M lost in new ACFI funding in one month

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The first month review (July) of the new ACFI funding program has demonstrated an increase in funding, says the Ageing Minister, Mark Butler. His figures indicate a rise from $8.8B in 2011/12 to $9.1B in 2012/13 – a 3.4% increase.

However both ACSA and LASA are represented on the Government’s ACFI Monitoring Group and have immediately hit back, saying real funding has actually dropped $2.21 per bed per day or $140M a year.
Gerard Mansour of LASA points to two key changes:

1. The base was lowered by 1.6% before the Government indexation was applied – effectively cancelling out an increase

2. Changes have been made to the scoring for Activities of Daily Living (ADL) and Complex Health Care (CHC) for new residents – meaning they receive less for the same service than existing residents

The fact is that even a 3.4% increase doesn’t satisfy the increasing number of people seeking aged care at a later and more intensive health support stage in their life, meaning higher average costs. Additionally there was a 2.9% minimum wage rise in July plus utilities. With 160,000 frail Australians in aged care, the $8.8B budget is $50,000 per head per year for 24/7 care and accommodation. That is the challenge.


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