Skip to content
COVID19, Medical Health Aged Care

Aged care providers say time’s up for government to reimburse COVID expenditure

Catholic Health Australia 2 mins read

Amid a sector-wide crisis in financial sustainability, aged care providers around the country are still  wondering when hundreds of millions of dollars of emergency COVID expenses will be reimbursed.

The Australian Government introduced COVID-19 Support Grants to help providers control outbreaks in their facilities, protecting vulnerable residents and their families, and preventing transmission with the local community.

Catholic Health Australia’s Director of Aged Care Jason Kara said that the aged care sector responded strongly throughout the worst of the pandemic, with staff, consumers and their families working together to abide by strict rules to reduce infection risk.

“Unfortunately, we see that the Government has still not reimbursed expenditure from 2021/22 and 2022/23,” Mr Kara said.

“With around 70 per cent of residential homes running at a loss, age care providers cannot continue to be left out of pocket for COVID-related expenses.”

These expenses are impacting providers across the country:

  • Calvary Health Care, a large national provider, has submitted around $55 million worth of COVID grant claims with only $5 million paid out
  • Southern Cross Care (SA, NT & VIC) has claimed just over $6 million with only $230,000 paid out
  • Southern Cross Care (NSW & ACT) has claimed $6 million with $2.2m outstanding
  • Southern Cross Care (Western Australia) has claimed $3.946 million with zero paid out
  • Southern Cross Care (Tasmania) has claimed $1.23 million with zero paid out
  • MercyCare in Western Australia has submitted $1.55 million in claims with only $55,000 paid out
  • Southern Cross Care (Queensland) has had all 2021/22 claims paid but has $600,000 outstanding from 2022/23

This as a pattern across the entire sector. Estia Health released in May an ASX statement which noted $21 million in outstanding COVID grant claims, $8.8 million dating from the 2021/22 financial year.

The delays in providing these reimbursements are hard to understand given the wealth of information the Department of Health and Aged Care hold on the cost of COVID outbreaks in aged care facilities.

Mr Kara said that it was bureaucracy that is holding up payments that could be done more efficiently and collaboratively.

“Bureaucracy has placed numerous barriers to reimbursing providers for their expenditure. This includes insisting on separate claims for each home and outbreak and multiple agencies querying the same claim,” he said.

“We have a system that has almost been designed to fail. Claims worth hundreds of thousands of dollars are held up for months by the government agency querying a $100 test expenditure. Common sense tells us that this could be streamlined through paying the approved amount immediately and allowing further discussion on any small, disputed amounts to occur later.”

There have been many attempts by providers to work with the Government to improve outcomes under the COVID grants program, however, these are not getting any results. The administration costs of progressing these claims and trying to work with Government are taking providers away from the core business of providing care. Recent Senate estimates testimony disclosed there were 11,000 grant applications and at least half a billion dollars still to be paid to providers.

“We have now entered the third financial year of the COVID grants payment scheme and the Government are not learning the lessons of the pandemic and improving the system. The cost of delivering this labour-intensive process would be better redirected to services,” Mr Kara said.


About us:

Catholic Health Australia is Australia’s largest non-government grouping of health and aged care services accounting for approximately 10 per cent of hospital-based healthcare in Australia. Our members also provide around 25 percent of private hospital care, 5 percent of public hospital care, 12 percent of aged care facilities, and 20 percent of home care and support for the elderly.


Contact details:

Anil Lambert 0416 426 722

More from this category

  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 18/12/2025
  • 22:11
BeOne Medicines Ltd.

BeOne Medicines Granted U.S. FDA Fast Track Designation for BGB-B2033 as Treatment for Hepatocellular Carcinoma

BGB-B2033 is a bispecific antibody directed at GPC3 and 4-1BB; key targets in the most common liver cancer FDA Fast Track Designation reflects the…

  • Contains:
  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 18/12/2025
  • 19:11
Takeda Pharmaceutical Company Limited

Takeda’s Zasocitinib Landmark Phase 3 Plaque Psoriasis Data Show Promise to Deliver Clear Skin in a Once-Daily Pill, Catalyzing a New Era of Treatment

Pivotal Phase 3 studies of once-daily oral zasocitinib met all primary and ranked secondary endpoints in patients with moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis More than half…

  • Contains:
  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 18/12/2025
  • 12:24
La Trobe University

Cell death discovery could aid cancer treatments

LaTrobe researchers have made a groundbreaking discovery about the way dying cells are cleared from our bodies, which could have important impacts on recovery from diseases including cancer infection and inflammatory diseases. Traditionally, it was believed dying cells were broken into smaller pieces by the cell’s own internal machinery, enabling the pieces to be more easily removed from the body. However the study, led by scientists at the La Trobe Institute for Molecular Science and Research Centre for Extracellular Vesicles found that the process of dying cell fragmentation is actually assisted by neighbouring cells. Published in Science Advances, the study…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.