Retirement villages will be offering residential care within five years

To read Jim Hazel’s article, please click here


Retirement villages – and serviced apartments – the missing link in Royal Commission’s reforms?

Serviced apartments – and the role of assisted living options in retirement villages – have been highlighted as a potential solution to balancing the need for flexible accommodation and care among submissions to the Royal Commission on its Consultation Paper ahead of its funding and financing hearing starting Monday week.

Arthur Koumoukelis, a Partner at law firm Thomson Geer, has warned the Commissioners that they are missing an important opportunity to cater for the 80% of people who want to age in their own homes, according to the Commission’s own research.

The choice is not simply between a nursing home and your current home,” he writes in his statement which is not made on the behalf of the firm.

“Given that the Royal Commission recognises the larger number of older Australians, it must also recognise that many of those would be living as couples with one frail and one less frail. The frail would need to live in a nursing home, but the less frail would choose to live in an independent environment but still supported.”

There should be a greater appreciation by the Royal Commission of the role that independent retirement village premises, structured as assisted living & serviced apartments, play in the continuum of care.

Mr Koumoukelis, who speaks from his personal experience advising the aged care and retirement village sector for 25 years and having his own mother and father go through the aged care system, argues the advantages of these models are many, including:

  • The separation of care from accommodation;

  • The ingoing contributions paid are not limited by the permitted use restrictions but are still protected in the hands of the residents through the Retirement Villages Act and statutory charges and registrations;

  • They are a recognised form of housing being adopted by consumers and recognised by financiers;

  • They provide socialisation and greater flexibility as to the range of services to be taken up by consumers as opposed to the mandated ‘required services’ under aged care.

The lawyer adds that had such an environment been available when his own parents needed services, he would have assisted them to move there instead of residential care.

It is a critical point for the Royal Commission to consider, especially in light of the evidence provided to this week’s home care hearing.

Direct experience witnesses stressed the importance of planning ahead for aged care and living in housing that is purpose-built for ageing.

The hearing’s international witness, Professor Jos Schols, a Professor of Old Age Medicine at Maastricht University in The Netherlands, also explained how the separation of care from accommodation there has led to a 50% drop in the number of people living in residential care as more people can access services from home.

Let’s not forget too Commissioner Lynelle Briggs’ catchphrase of finding the ‘joy’ in aged care.

Surely villages provide the best chance of this – will the Commissioners tune into this message?


Industry recognises new concepts.

There will be an increasing need of new concepts of senior housing with support services which can be compared to a care home but with bigger apartments, a greater diversity of services and new service suppliers from the hotel and hospitality sectors,

The Weekly Source


Successful Communities.

“Specifically look for opportunities to drive early visitation, which is often cited as an eye-opening inspiring experience. This not only has a material impact on a buyer interest, but also on the speed of the decision-making”.

The Weekly Source


Retirement village & over 50s comparison?

Understand the difference table - click here


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National LASA Conference

Over 900 delegates and leading industry heads attended the Leading Age Service 3-day National Conference held at Sydney Convention Centre. Genesis was asked to present a panel session on the innovative supported living model that bridges the gap between traditional aged care and retirement villages, as well as the group’s ongoing sales success achievements in this groundbreaking “Supported Living Model” all of which have the industry talking.

 
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Retirement Villages Association

John Collyns, the CEO of the Retirement Villages Association NZ headed a group of 68 delegates who visited Fairways recently during their conference, to get a more detailed understanding of the successful supported living model.