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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND AGEING, SYSTEM FOR THE PAYMENT OF AGED RESIDENTIAL CARE
6 People in residential care includes both permanent and respite admissions. REFERENCE PERIOD 7 The data relates to people in residential aged care as at 30 June 2005. KEY DATA ITEMS 8 The following key data items were used in this product: 9 Care recipients: A person assessed as having significant care needs which can be appropriately met through the provision of residential care, community care and/or flexible care. 10 Resident: A resident is a person who has been assessed as requiring residential care and who resides in a Commonwealth-funded aged care service. 11 Residential care: Personal and/ or nursing care that is provided to a person in a residential care service. The person is also provided with accommodation that includes appropriate staffing, meals, cleaning services, furnishings, furniture and equipment for the provision of that care and accommodation. GEOGRAPHY 12 The location of the service outlet (not the service recipient) is geocoded to the Statistical Local Area (SLA). In this product, SLAs are aggregated to LGAs. The 2005 edition of the Australian Standard Geographic Classification (ASGC) (cat. no. 1216.0) was used in the coding. COLLECTION METHODOLOGY 13 Where a person is assessed and it is recommended that the person be admitted to a residential aged care facility, a delegate of the assessing team will complete an Aged Care Application and Approval Form (Form 2624) in consultation with the applicant. The form is signed by either the applicant or someone on behalf of the applicant. 14 Details from this form are entered into the SPARC system by DoHA staff. Data are then transferred to DoHA's data warehouse, the Aged Care and Community Care Management Information System (ACCMIS), from which statistical extracts are taken. 15 Data from ACCMIS are provided to AIHW who produce a national publication on residential aged care. ACCURACY 16 The ACCMIS data warehouse is periodically 'refreshed' and some existing data are revised when this occurs. As such, two extractions of data for the same period of time could have some differences due to revisions in between the dates of extraction. 17 Care should be exercised in the interpretation of these tables as residents may not necessarily have been living in the same LGA prior to their admission to residential care. 18 Given that this data are from DoHA's payment system to residential aged care facilities, the collection is effectively a census, which means that the data are not subject to sampling variability. However other inaccuracies, collectively referred to as non-sampling error, may affect the data. These non-sampling errors may arise from a number of sources, including:
COLLECTION HISTORY 19 Residential aged care was restructured in 1997–98 and a single system for the collection of information, SPARC, was introduced. PUBLISHED DATA 20 The AIHW publication Residential aged care in Australia, 2003–04 (AIHW cat. no. AGE 43) is available from the AIHW website, as is a working paper entitled Client characteristics metadata in residential aged care. RELATED WEB SITES 21 The Department of Health and Ageing web site can be found at <www.health.gov.au>. The AIHW web site can be found at <www.aihw.gov.au>. Document Selection These documents will be presented in a new window.
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