Key Speakers: Key benefitsof attending:
The Australian
Future of Aged Care Summit30th August - 1st September 2016 | Sheraton on the Park, Sydney
Navigating reform and taking a future focus in service delivery
Professor Martin GreenChief Executive Officer
Care England, UK
Dr Susan KochFormer Director
Royal District Nursing Service (RDNS)
Former ChairMinisterial Dementia
Advisory Group
Ed HardingDirector
Health PolicyPartnership, UK
Gary BarnierChief Executive Officer
Opal Aged CareMember
Aged Care Sector Committee, Department
of Social Services
Cameron O'ReillyChief Executive
Aged Care Guild
Paul OstrowskiChief Executive Officer
Care Connect
Professor Richard OsborneNHMRC Senior Research
FellowDeakin University
Ray GlickmanChief Executive Officer
Amana Living
Elizabeth DrozdChief Executive Officer
Australian Multicultural Community Services
Catherine DaleyChief Executive Officer
Integrated Living Australia
Stelvio VidoChief Executive Officer
Spectrum Migrant Resource Centre
Professor Matthew ParsonsBoard Member
Waikato District Health Board (NZ)
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• Gain insights on all key upcoming aged care reforms in 2017 and beyond
• Embed innovative resourcing strategies to prepare for growth and scalability
• Implement cutting edge technology to support CDC administrative requirements
• Leverage future consumer centred service design and delivery models
• Utilise latest assistive technologies to strengthen your service delivery
• Adopt tools to strengthen and embed quality across your organisation
• Effectively integrate your home care and CDC packages
Over 30+ Speakers! View full speaker line-up inside
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The Australian Future of Aged Care Summit
KEY SPEAKERS:
Professor Martin GreenChief Executive Officer
Care England, UK
Paul OstrowskiChief Executive Officer
Care Connect
Professor Richard OsborneNHMRC Senior Research
FellowDeakin University
Ed HardingDirector
Health PolicyPartnership, UK
Ray GlickmanChief Executive Officer
Amana Living
Dr Susan KochFormer Director
Royal District Nursing Service (RDNS)
Former ChairMinisterial Dementia
Advisory Group
Elizabeth DrozdChief Executive Officer
Australian Multicultural Community Services
Cameron O'ReillyChief Executive
Aged Care Guild
Catherine DaleyChief Executive Officer
Integrated Living Australia
Ralph WarburtonChief Financial OfficerCatholic Healthcare
Gorm KirschManaging Director
Home Nursing Group
Peter ScuttExecutive Director
Better Caring
Karen JordanGeneral Manager -
Community Services Montefiore Home
Mary DelahuntyGeneral Manager Business Development and Policy
HESTA
Professor Lynn ChenowethDirector, Dementia Collaborative
Research CentresProfessor of Nursing
Centre for Health Brain Ageing
Petra WestphalNational Manager -
HomecareArcare Aged Care
Gavin HudsonQueensland State Manager
KinCare
Walter de RuyterService Manager
Uniting
Dawn YatesExecutive Officer
Seniors Recreation Council of WA
Irene SteinOperations Manager -
HomecareSummitCare
Ellis BlaikieSenior Policy Adviser
Combined Pensioners and Superannuants Association
Professor Matthew ParsonsBoard Member
Waikato District Health Board (NZ)
Andrea MorelloHealth Services Manager, Flinders Human Behaviour and Health Research Unit
Flinders University
Dr Joanne CurryAdjunct Associate ProfessorWestern Sydney University
Ingrid BurkettAssociate Director
Co-Design &Systems Change
The Australian Centre for Social Innovation
Steven StrangeChief Executive Officer
Health Metrics
Stelvio VidoChief Executive Officer
Spectrum Migrant Resource Centre
Carole BainGeneral Manager - Country
ServicesSilver Chain Group
Samantha EdmondsManager - Ageing and Aged
Care ProjectsSilver Rainbow - National
LGBTI Health Alliance
Jess JohnsonAccount Director
MDF Group
Dr Rachel WintertonResearch Fellow
La Trobe University
Gary BarnierChief Executive Officer
Opal Aged CareMember
Aged Care Sector Committee, Department of Social Services
Professor Jeffrey SoarChair Human Centred Technology
School of Management and Enterprise, University of
Southern Queensland
Robert BowdenDirector
PhysioXtra, Xtra Home Care and WorkXtra
Aged Care
Jey ThaniExecutive General Manager
Vivir Healthcare
Jenny MowattGeneral Manager -
Business OperationsVivir Healthcare
A very interesting and entertaining conference.
– Maxine Scicluna, ACT Health
To ensure a timely, relevant event program with strong coverage of the most pressing concerns relating to the sector, this inaugural summit is being steered by the following expert stakeholders in aged care:
LETTER FROM THE CHAIR:
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The Australian Future of Aged Care Summit
!
Very informative session which allowed me to gauge the sectors position on recent legislative changes.
— Sheliah Cummins, Care Options
TESTIMONIALS:
ADVISORY PANELS:
Dear Colleague,
As the National Aged Care Reform continues into 2017, major transitions are in process for the aged care sector. It is clear that the reform calls for a period of reinvention and innovation in business models and service provision. As the reforms put choice into the hands of consumers, the sector must undergo structural and technological transformation which will allow access, choice, diversity of services and differentiation. Technological architecture will be a critical factor in driving improved efficiency, productivity and the quality of care delivery.
Akolade’s Australian Future of Aged Care Summit 2016 will shine a spotlight on upcoming policy shifts as well as structural and implementation challenges for aged care providers. Beyond these pressing regulatory and market shifts, this summit will also provide timely insights into innovations in aged care design and delivery, future-focused service offerings, and the latest developments in digital and assistive technologies.
Sector leaders and early adopters will offer keen insights into how technology and innovative services have enhanced person centred care models.
We invite you to join us for three days of insightful and timely discussions on the future of Australian aged care.
Kind regards,
Catherine DaleyChief Executive OfficerIntegrated Living Australia
Chair, Opening Plenary
Lee ThomasFederal Secretary
Australian Nursing and Midwifery Foundation
Professor Elizabeth BeattieDirector - Dementia
Collaborative Research CentreQueensland University of
Technology
Cameron O'ReillyChief Executive
Aged Care Guild
Andrea MorelloHealth Services Manager, Flinders Human Behaviour and Health Research Unit
Flinders University
Professor Julie BylesDirector Research Centre for
Generational Health and Ageing Faculty of HealthUniversity of Newcastle
Samantha EdmondsManager - Ageing and Aged
Care ProjectsSilver Rainbow - National
LGBTI Health Alliance
9:10 National aged care reform and the future of aged care • Examining trends in aged care and indicators for the national reform • Transitioning to a consumer directed system - policy drivers for change • Implications of 2017 regulatory reform for business models and service provision Gary Barnier, Chief Executive Officer, Opal Aged Care, Member, Aged Care Sector Committee, Department of Social Services
9:40 Adapting to a changing funding and policy environment
• Exploring why more services are needed due to demographic change • Outlining the importance of having a long term plan for governments across the globe • The solutions lie with providers, not with Commissioners or Governments Professor Martin Green, Chief Executive Officer, Care England, UK
CONFERENCE DAY ONE | TUESDAY, 30TH AUGUST 2016
CONSUMER DIRECTED AGED CARE REFORM OVERVIEW I 9:10am to 11:20am
I enjoyed the interaction and the ability to work with others in the sector from across the country. Good learning experience.
— Carole Bain, Silver Chain
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The Australian Future of Aged Care Summit
10:10 Superannuation: Through the looking glass • Investing for change in social projects • HESTA advocacy on women and low paid HACs workers • Major policy changes over history and the recent ones we face • Worldwide challenges and how we stack up Mary Delahunty, General Manager Business Development and Policy, HESTA
10:40 Health Data in Cyberspace – Security, Sovereignty and Privacy • Exploring legal frameworks, obligations and penalties • Determining the safety of your health data • Reviewing best practice in data services procurement Steven Strange, Chief Executive Officer, Health Metrics
8:00 Registration opens 9:00 Opening remarks from the Chair Catherine Daley, Chief Executive Officer, Integrated Living Australia
11:40 Cutting the administrative burden of aged care case management using paperless technologies • Maximising operational efficiency through transitioning to a paperless case management system • Managing the cost and administrative burden in itself of this kind of major organisational change • Exploring case examples of successful shifts towards electronic systems Karen Jordan, General Manager - Community Services, Montefiore Home
12:10 Maximising workforce efficiency by using innovative technology platforms • New models for home support and care – connecting consumers and carers • Empowering both consumers and carers through innovation • Differentiating your organisation through technology use in service practice • Engaging the consumer about innovative home support packages Peter Scutt, Executive Director, Better Caring
11:40 What will Allied Health services look like in a consumer directed and fee for service model • Understanding contemporary consumer expectations in a changing policy environment • Working above and beyond the aged care standards to drive innovation • Ideas and Innovation of allied health services discussed and presented • Where is the money coming from the pay for services to meet consumer needs Robert Bowden, Director, PhysioXtra, Xtra Home Care and WorkXtra Aged Care
12:10
Please choose from Stream A or Stream B to enhance your conference experience I 11:40am to 3:10pm
STREAM A:ORGANISATIONAL ADAPTATION TO CDC
STREAM B:TECHNOLOGY SUPPORTING THE CDC TRANSITION
Chair: Irene Stein, Operations Manager – Homecare, SummitCare
Chair: Professor Matthew Parsons, Board Member, Waikato District Health Board (NZ)
12:40 Networking luncheon
11:20 Morning refreshments
1:40 Responding to digital disruption in the emerging CDC market • Addressing the increase in sophistication of service delivery • Discussing the future of CDC: Is it an ‘Uber’ opportunity for professionals? • How will aged care providers adapt, survive and prosper Walter de Ruyter, Service Manager, Uniting
2:10 Managing and responding to challenges posed by rural population ageing • Key challenges of introducing CDC in rural and regional communities • Accounting for choice and diversity among rural and regional populations • Examining the social aspects of ageing in rural areas and facilitating healthy ageing Dr Rachel Winterton, Research Fellow, La Trobe University
2:40 Ensuring systems integration between management of different packages • Integrating HCP and CHSP package delivery into care planning • Implementing best practice processes and systems to enable systems integration • Managing workforce allocations between multiple packages effectively, minimising confusion Catherine Daley, Chief Executive Officer, Integrated Living Australia
1:40 Delivering support, opportunity, access and equity to CALD ageing communities • Pros and cons of the current aged care reform: A multicultural perspective • Providing flexible community aged care to overcome service barriers • Improving independence and support for CALD communities Elizabeth Drozd, Chief Executive Officer, Australian Multicultural Community Services
2:10 When the government comes knocking: Ensuring preparedness to return unspent package funds • Employing best practice budgetary management to ensure funds are allocated accurately • Buffering against additional costs through service pricing • Understanding how unspent package funds will be refunded, processes and key dates to be mindful of Petra Westphal, National Manager – Homecare, Arcare Aged Care
2:40 Ensuring a smooth transition towards consumer directed care in rural and regional communities • Key challenges of introducing CDC in rural and regional communities • Handling assessment and case management in a small pool of care providers • Making sure that culturally and linguistically diverse community members don’t slip through the gaps Carole Bain, General Manager - Country Services, Silver Chain Group
3:30 Workforce planning: meeting the staffing demands of a changing aged care sector • Attracting and retaining talent and fostering empowerment and career progression • Skilling a diverse and reform-responsive aged care sector with a strong consumer focus • Ensuring the best quality care in an increasingly high demand, independent and distributed workforce Jey Thani, Executive General Manager, Vivir Healthcare Jenny Mowatt, General Manager - Business Operations, Vivir Healthcare
4:00 Developing a market-driven approach in the context of aged care reforms • Refocusing the organisation on market-driven fundamentals • Identifying the key service and product components • Understanding underlying cost structures and establishing market pricing Ray Glickman, Chief Executive Officer, Amana Living
4:30 Focus on nursing in the aged care sector • Role of registered nurses in aged care to deliver specialist, safe and quality care • Examining the challenges for nursing in a diversity of aged care settings • Perspectives on the Aged Care Road Map and the ongoing reform Adjunct Professor Kylie Ward, Chief Executive Officer, Australian College of Nursing
5:00 Reflecting upon the New Zealand experience • Applying lessons learnt to the CHSP transition • Managing the shift to needs based care fee structures • Demonstrating continuous improvement in wellness and reablement • Understanding restorative support in preparing a request for proposal (RFP’s) Professor Matthew Parsons, Board Member, Waikato District Health Board (NZ)
Akolade is pleased to offer a select number of scholarships for consumers and family members who would ordinarily be unable to attend this event. To apply, please contact [email protected]
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The Australian Future of Aged Care Summit
3:10 Afternoon refreshments
CLOSING PLENARY I 3:30pm to 5:30pm
5:30 Closing remarks and end of conference day one
5:40 Networking drinks reception
CLOSING NETWORKING AND DRINKS RECEPTION
8:00 Registration opens
9:00 INTERNATIONAL KEYNOTE ADDRESS The global state of play in person-centred care • Examining key findings of the UK Health Foundation and Health Policy partnership International Environment scan in person-centred care • Progress to date in implementing the principles of person-centred care worldwide • Building a global picture of key contributors involved in person-centred care Ed Harding, Director, Health Policy Partnership, UK (Live webcast)
9:40 Health literacy: An emerging patient centred philosophy in aged care • Examining the role of health literacy as a paradigm in transforming aged care towards a stronger focus on consumer needs • Taking an overview of the Ophelia principles and their power in improving care outcomes • Practical examples of health literacy implementation Professor Richard Osborne, NHMRC Senior Research Fellow, Deakin University
10:10 In a pure CDC world, is there a future for the brokerage model? • Perspectives on what choice means for its customers • How this existential moment has led Care Connect to rethink who its customers are and helped engage its workforce • How will the Case Management profession evolve • How we could use digital technologies to facilitate choice and best practice. • What the future market will look like Paul Ostrowski, Chief Executive Officer, Care Connect
10:40 Building collaborative partnerships for best practice service delivery • Taking a networked approach to care delivery – working together to take a holistic view of the needs of the client • Brokering successful lasting partnerships and managing challenges in collaboration • Comparing success stories of coordinated cooperative partnerships for best practice service delivery Andrea Morello, Health Services Manager, Flinders Human Behaviour and Health Research Unit, Flinders University
CONFERENCE DAY TWO | WEDNESDAY, 31ST AUGUST 2016
THE FUTURE OF CONSUMER CENTRED AGED CARE SERVICE DESIGN AND DELIVERY I 9:10am to 11:00am
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The Australian Future of Aged Care Summit
8:50 Opening remarks from the Chair Ray Glickman, Chief Executive Officer, Amana Living
11:40 E-health and digital health transformation in aged care • Achieving improved health outcomes in aged care through digital technologies • Moving from innovative pilots to practical delivery and scalability • Tracking key improvement targets: cost, quality and accessibility • Enabling inclusion for CALD Stelvio Vido, Chief Executive Officer, Spectrum Migrant Resource Centre
12:10 Smart Ageing and Independent Living (SAIL) • The development and deployment of assistive and medical technologies • Interdisciplinary approaches to drive smart technologies • Implications for quality of life and healthcare for users • The business case for assistive technologies Professor Jeffrey Soar, Chair Human Centred Technology, School of Management and Enterprise, University of Southern Queensland
Please choose from Stream A or Stream B to enhance your conference experience I 11:40am to 3:10pm
STREAM A:ASSISTIVE TECHNOLOGY IN AGED CARE
STREAM B: IMPROVING QUALITY IN AGED CARE
11:10 Morning refreshments
12:40 Networking luncheon
11:40 Taking a quality based approach to aged care in Australia • Trends and innovation in ageing and aged care • Quantifying quality: evidence based care and quality indicators of care • Examining best practice care governance models in aged care settings Ingrid Burkett, Associate Director Co-Design+Systems Change, The Australian Centre for Social Innovation
12:10 The consumer centric future of dementia care • Statistics on the current and future impact of dementia in Australia • Exploring forward leading approaches to dementia care • Strengths and challenges in providing best practice dementia care in an increasingly consumer directed care environment Dr Susan Koch, Former Director, Royal District Nursing Service (RDNS), and Former Chair, Ministerial Dementia Advisory Group
1:40 From “cost” to “value” – navigating the transition from underspend to profit • Many organisations have relied on underspend for viability • Underspends are not transparent, nor an appropriate use of taxpayer money • Organisations need to navigate a transition to real viability (profit) based on an articulated value proposition • This presentation will assist organisations to consider the benefits they offer, the value of those benefits and how to market themselves Gorm Kirsch, Proprietor & Managing Director, Home Nursing Group
1:40 Changes in care models and the implications for care workers • The impact of emerging models of care on the aged care workforce • Delivering quality assessments and care to people with diverse care needs • Collaboration and advocacy with multiple stakeholders • Providing psycho social support Professor Lynn Chenoweth, Director, Dementia Collaborative Research Centres, and Professor of Nursing, Centre for Health Brain Ageing
Chair: Walter de Ruyter, Service Manager, Uniting
Chair: Elizabeth Drozd, Chief Executive Officer, Australian Multicultural Community Services
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The Australian Future of Aged Care Summit
2:10 How a structured maintenance system will reduce costs and operational risks • How to establish a structured maintenance process to ensure regulatory compliance and reduce overall costs • Typical cost leakages and how they can be avoided • Maximise the efficiency and effectiveness of the living environment Jess Johnson, Account Director, MDF Group
2:10 CASE STUDY Successes of Silver Rainbow’s LGBTI aged care training and accreditation program • Exploring progress to date in creating safer and more supportive care environments for LGBTI clients • LGBTI training and Rainbow Tick accreditation programs • Creating differentiated standards for LGBTI friendly care organisations at a My Aged Care level Samantha Edmonds, Manager, Ageing and Aged Care Projects, Silver Rainbow, National LGBTI Health Alliance
With the number of people over 65 set to double by 2040 there is an urgent need to extend the access, availability and reach of aged care services to meet new demand. Equally as national policy reform focuses on consumer directed care the sector must implement organisational and cultural change and service innovation to meet the changing demands.
In this workshop delegates will: • Develop key strategies to re-design thinking and embed innovation within organisational culture• Addressing the emerging trends and expectations in ageing and aged care • Consider how to innovate services provision and future planning as your organisation adapts to changing sector policy and regulatory contexts• Discuss the strategies for working amidst sector flux to redefine success through learning what could lead to better outcomes• Learn how to developing reflective practice, build innovation capacity and embed innovation capability
Drawn from a well-received program delivered for a number of years by Flinders Human Behaviour and Health Research Unit, this interactive workshop provides opportunities for supported practice and skill development in motivational interviewing and techniques to empower aged care consumers. The session will run through practical tools that you can use to engage and partner with your clients to set goals, develop a consumer directed care plan and support lifestyle behaviour changes.
In this workshop delegates will: • Build confidence in communication skills• Learn strategies for improved engagement and communication with clients, families and peers• Practice motivational strategies to support clients to engage in goal setting and behaviour change• Take part in a supported opportunity to develop a client centred care plan that is responsive to cultural requirements• Develop a better understanding of how to motivate clients to achieve their goals, be involved in planned reviews and make changes to plans to accommodate their best possible care outcomes
Goal setting strategies for consumer directed care The future of ageing and how to design for continuous innovation
POST CONFERENCE WORKSHOPS DAY THREE | THURSDAY, 1ST SEPTEMBER 2016Workshop A | 9:00am – 12:00pm Workshop B | 1:00pm - 4:00pm
Facilitator: Andrea MorelloHealth Services Manager, Flinders Human Behaviour and Health Research UnitFlinders University
Facilitator: Ingrid BurkettAssociate Director Co-Design & Systems ChangeThe Australian Centre for Social Innovation
4:20 Roundtable and Summit Communique Session Closing the gaps of Australia’s approach to consumer directed care
This interactive round table session will engage all delegates to share their learnings across the two days of discussions. Findings of this session will be summarised into a summit communique, bringing together the key outcomes. Take part, share your take home lessons from the conference and have your say on the future of aged care in Australia.
4:50 Close of day two and end of the conference
CLOSING PLENARY I 3:10pm to 4:50pm 3:10 Bringing a spirit of fun to senior life through LiveLighter Aged Care Games • Why do we need to explore and embed physical and social interaction programs within the aged care service delivery • An overview of the history of the LiveLighter Aged Care Games and the outcomes thus far • Opportunities for expanding on recreation programs like this with an aged care market increasingly focused on home based care Dawn Yates, Executive Officer, Seniors Recreation Council of WA
3:40 FOCUS SESSION Overcoming financial volatility in the move towards CDC • Managing volatility and uncertainty of client supply in a market environment where the consumer decide • Diversifying aged care portfolios where possible to foster financial stability • Examining successful strategies to reduce financial uncertainty in a changing sector Ralph Warburton, Chief Financial Officer, Catholic Healthcare Services
2:40 Afternoon refreshments
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