Affiliation:
1. School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine Monash University Melbourne Victoria Australia
2. Benetas Hawthorn Victoria Australia
3. Centre for Cultural Diversity in Ageing Hawthorn Victoria Australia
4. Australian Association of Gerontology Melbourne Victoria Australia
Abstract
AbstractObjectivesAustralia's migration programs mean that an increasing number of people living in residential aged care (RAC) were born in a non‐main English‐speaking country (NMESC) and have a preferred language other than English (LOTE). This study describes the number of such residents in aged care facilities in Australia and discusses the implications for their care.MethodsThis study presents a secondary analysis of the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW) National Aged Care Data Clearinghouse 2020–2021 to examine the country of birth and preferred language of people living in RAC in each state and territory and the number of residents who are lone speakers of their language in their facility.ResultsLess than half (45 per cent) of the residents born in a NMESC had a preferred LOTE. Of those, 50 per cent spoke Italian, Greek or Cantonese. At least 60 other preferred languages were recorded, the majority with very few speakers. Australia‐wide, more than one in five residents with a preferred top 20 LOTE are the lone speaker of their language in their facility. The proportion of lone speakers is highest in Tasmania, the ACT and Queensland.ConclusionsUnderstanding the extent of language diversity, location and linguistic isolation of people living in RAC is essential for planning to ensure residents with a preferred LOTE receive high‐quality, individualised care. There is a need for consistent and timely data collection about the diversity of aged care residents and workers in this sector.
Reference30 articles.
1. Australian Institute of Health and Welfare.Gen Aged Care Data: people using aged care.2023. Accessed March 1 2023.https://www.gen‐agedcaredata.gov.au/Topics/People‐using‐aged‐care#Aged%20care%20use%20in%20Australia
2. Cultural Diversity, Health and Ageing
3. Australian Bureau of Statistics [ABS].Proficiency in Spoken English (ENGLP) by Age in Five Year Groups (AGE5P) 2021 Census of Population and Housing – Census TableBuilder Basic – 2021 Census Cultural Diversity 2022. Accessed February 28 2023.https://www.abs.gov.au/statistics/microdata‐tablebuilder/tablebuilder
4. The intersection of culture in the provision of dementia care: A systematic review
5. Steps towards equitable care: creating web pages to highlight diversity for Australia’s aged care and end of life care workforce