TY - JOUR
T1 - Monitoring cross-setting care and outcomes among older people in aged care
T2 - a national framework is needed
AU - Inacio, Maria C.
AU - Ryan, Olivia
AU - Gray, Leonard C.
AU - Caughey, Gillian E.
AU - Australian Consortium for Aged Care Quality Measurement Toolbox (ACAC-QMET) Research Collaborators
AU - Westbook, Johanna
AU - Braithwaite, Jeffrey
AU - Hibbert, Peter
AU - Crotty, Maria
AU - Comans, Tracy
AU - Sluggett, Janet
AU - Ward, Stephanie
AU - Wabe, Nasir
AU - Cooke, Emma
AU - Jorissen, Robert
AU - Schulze, Marjorie
AU - Beattie, Elizabeth
AU - Eshetie, Tesfahun
AU - Khadka, Jyoti
AU - Ratcliffe, Julie
PY - 2025/4/3
Y1 - 2025/4/3
N2 - Establishing an evidence-based framework to monitor and evaluate quality and safety of care for older people is critical. Despite progress in health system performance monitoring in Australia, slower progress has occurred for the older population accessing aged care services. With an aging population and increasing demands on aged care and healthcare systems, there is growing recognition of the need for more coordinated and integrated care across settings. It is not uncommon for older people accessing aged care to require a range of services administered by different organisations simultaneously (e.g. primary care, home care) and sequentially (e.g. hospitals, residential care). Aged care also represents an increasingly regulated sector, with significant investment in and growing recognition of the value of quality measurement. Accountability for care quality and safety is often shared among providers, with consequent challenges in attributing responsibility. Therefore, the development of a pragmatic national framework to support high-quality, person-centred care for the older population accessing aged care services across care settings is one opportunity for shared responsibility, care monitoring, and quality improvement activities that could lead to better outcomes for this population. The strategy for framework development proposed in this perspective has implications for aged care and healthcare providers, consumers, policy makers, regulators, and academics. Once implemented, this framework has the potential to drive consistent high-quality care to improve health outcomes and wellbeing among older people accessing aged care services.
AB - Establishing an evidence-based framework to monitor and evaluate quality and safety of care for older people is critical. Despite progress in health system performance monitoring in Australia, slower progress has occurred for the older population accessing aged care services. With an aging population and increasing demands on aged care and healthcare systems, there is growing recognition of the need for more coordinated and integrated care across settings. It is not uncommon for older people accessing aged care to require a range of services administered by different organisations simultaneously (e.g. primary care, home care) and sequentially (e.g. hospitals, residential care). Aged care also represents an increasingly regulated sector, with significant investment in and growing recognition of the value of quality measurement. Accountability for care quality and safety is often shared among providers, with consequent challenges in attributing responsibility. Therefore, the development of a pragmatic national framework to support high-quality, person-centred care for the older population accessing aged care services across care settings is one opportunity for shared responsibility, care monitoring, and quality improvement activities that could lead to better outcomes for this population. The strategy for framework development proposed in this perspective has implications for aged care and healthcare providers, consumers, policy makers, regulators, and academics. Once implemented, this framework has the potential to drive consistent high-quality care to improve health outcomes and wellbeing among older people accessing aged care services.
KW - framework
KW - long-term care
KW - quality measurement
KW - quality of care
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105002804714&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://purl.org/au-research/grants/NHMRC/2015823
UR - http://purl.org/au-research/grants/NHMRC/119378
UR - http://purl.org/au-research/grants/NHMRC/2026400
U2 - 10.1071/AH24294
DO - 10.1071/AH24294
M3 - Article
C2 - 40174238
AN - SCOPUS:105002804714
SN - 0156-5788
VL - 49
JO - Australian Health Review
JF - Australian Health Review
IS - 2
M1 - AH24294
ER -