The nation's largest Not For Profit group of health, community, and aged care providers is urging all political parties and candidates to put health and aged care at the forefront of their campaigns after Prime Minister Anthony Albanese called the Federal Election today (Friday, 28 March). The Albanese Government came to power in May 2022, stating nobody should be denied access to high quality aged care services.
![]() Three years on, the Aged Care Taskforce established by Labor has delivered funding reform, but supply issues around aged care beds, Home Care Packages and workforce persist. Catholic Health Australia (CHA) CEO Jason Kara said the five-week election campaign provides a chance to outline real reform in health and aged care, ensuring private hospitals remain viable, public hospitals attract appropriate investment, aged care residents receive quality and sustainable care, and regional communities are not left behind. In aged care, CHA’s proposed reforms include strengthening hardship provisions to ensure people don’t miss out under the new Aged Care Act.
CHA has set out six aged care policy priorities:
Tom Symondson, the CEO of aged care peak body Ageing Australia, said three weeks ago the timelime for implementing the Support at Home Program was "bordering on impossible" and, after the Federal Budget on Tuesday, underlined the $10,000 per provider for critical upgrades to ICT and systems under the Program was insufficient. ![]()
Ageing Australia had made nine recommendations to Government ahead of the Budget including a $600 million ICT grant program for aged care providers, but this was not reflected in the Budget. |


Retirement Living Council demands Aged Care Act be delayed
Its Executive Director Daniel Gannon has listed six reasons why the Albanese Government should delay the 1 July introduction of the new Aged Care Act.
