Topic - aged care
Operators report improvement in latest Residential Aged Care Quality Indicators

Fewer aged care residents are being prescribed nine or more medications but the issue of polypharmacy remains the key challenge for residential care operators, according to a new report.

The Australian Institute of Health and Welfare’s latest release of Residential Aged Care Quality Indicators, from January to March, show that 37.4% of residents were prescribed nine or more medications, which is a slight improvement on both October-December 2021 (38.3%) and July-September 2021 (41%).

In addition, 20.5% of aged care residents were being prescribed antipsychotic medication, which is lower than the previous two quarters (20.7% and 21.6%). The proportion of antipsychotic users diagnosed with psychosis (including delusions, hallucinations, paranoia, or disordered thought) remained at 11.1% (for the past two quarters) and lower than the July-September 2021 quarter (11.6%).

The latest results, from data provided by 92% of residential aged care services, also showed the rate of falls (31.5%) remained the same as the last quarter. However, falls resulting in major injury increased to 2.2% from 2.1% over the previous six months. Major injuries include bone fractures, joint dislocations, closed head injuries with altered consciousness and subdural haematoma.

Among the positive news was a slight drop in residents having to be physically restrained. Based on a three-day recording period during the third quarter, 37,050 residents were restrained, including 28,907 residents restrained exclusively via a secure area. This represents 21.4% of total residents, which is lower than October-December (21.9%) and July-September (23%).

The number of pressure injuries rose slightly. 10,403 residents had one or more pressure injuries including 1,420 residents who acquired a pressure injury offsite. The proportion of residents with one or more pressure injury was 5.9%, an increase on 5.7% the previous quarter.

The final Quality Indicator used is unplanned weight loss, which is where a resident loses weight despite there being no written strategy or ongoing record relating to planned weight loss.

The rate of significant unplanned weight loss, which is 5% or more when comparing to previous quarters, was 10.9% of residents, an increase from 8.9% and 8.4% in the previous two quarters.

Consecutive unplanned weight loss, which is weight loss every month over three consecutive months of the quarter, was also up in the January-March quarter (11.2%) compared to October-December (10%) and July-September (9.5%).

Latest stories