Media Release
Aged Care
review
royal commission
Government
Survey
Nurses
Care Workers
ANMF to conduct ‘pulse check’ of Australia’s aged care system
16 October 2025The Australian Nursing and Midwifery Federation (ANMF) has launched a comprehensive national review of Australia’s aged care system – to assess the effectiveness of the implementation of the Aged Care Royal Commission’s recommendations announced in 2021.
Announcing the review at the ANMF’s 17th Biennial National Conference on the Gold Coast today, Federal Secretary Annie Butler said it will serve as a ‘pulse check’ of the aged care sector, underpinned by the insights and experiences of frontline nurses and care workers.
In addition to analysing key stakeholder and government reports on the sector’s performance, ANMF members will be asked for their feedback on the key pillars of: staffing (ratios); skill mix; funding; consumer safety; worker safety and clinical safety.
“Despite the damning findings of the Royal Commission and its 148 recommendations over four years ago, ANMF members continue to tell us that their ability to deliver safe, quality care to residents and clients is being compromised by understaffing and unsafe workloads. Too many of them say nothing seems to have changed,” Ms Butler explained.
“These reports are supported by government data which clearly shows that many providers across the country are failing to meet their legislated obligations. This is very troubling. But what’s even worse, more troubling and disturbing is that some providers are manipulating the system to avoid genuinely meeting staffing requirements by changing rosters for frontline nurses and direct care workers, including cuts to rostered staffing hours, shift lengths and shift times, particularly night and weekend shifts, and changing workers’ job titles and classifications to include them in mandated care minutes reports. It’s why the delivery of care continues to be compromised in residential aged care facilities.
“These behaviours, coupled with an ongoing failure of some providers to pass on tax payer funded wage increases to their staff, are not only driving quality staff away from the sector but are risking the health, safety and happiness of the older Australians in their care.
“This is a deeply distressing situation for ANMF members. It also risks undermining the Government’s commitment to reform of the sector and its implementation of the Royal Commission’s recommendations. Most importantly it risks perpetuating the neglect of older people uncovered by the Royal Commission.
To ensure that does not happen, we need to undertake this urgent ‘pulse check’ of the aged care system, and address these fundamental problems, so we can avoid the need for another Royal Commission in the future.”
Ms Butler said the ANMF national survey will inform a new ANMF campaign focused on aged care staffing, funding and workforce planning.
The ANMF, with over 345,000 members, is the industrial and professional voice for nurses, midwives and carers in Australia.
ANMF media release authorised by Annie Butler, ANMF Federal Secretary. 1/365 Queen St, Melbourne.
ANMF media inquiries: Richard Lenarduzzi 0411 254 390
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