Skip to content
Medical Health Aged Care

New legislation supports nurses to do the job they are qualified to do

Australian Nursing and Midwifery Federation (Victorian Branch) 2 mins read

ANMF (Vic Branch) welcomes the Victorian Government’s new legislation that will see only qualified health practitioners – like registered and enrolled nurses – able to administer specific medicines and drugs in residential aged care. 

ANMF (Vic Branch) has been campaigning for this change and was consulted on the Drugs, Poisons and Controlled Substances Amendment Bill 2025, introduced into Victorian Parliament on 30 July 2025. The Bill will mean medication administration will no longer be performed by unregulated staff who are not bound by the standards set by a relevant registration authority such as the Nursing and Midwifery Board of Australia.

Changes to the Act over 20 years ago meant that personal care workers in aged care were unfairly given the responsibility of medication administration and subsequently too many residents were given their medications unsafely, without clinical oversight.  Registered and enrolled nurses are educated and regulated to undertake this role safely and competently.

The amendment means that from 1 July 2026 drugs such as local anaesthetics, antibiotics and medicines with strict legislative controls must be administered by health practitioners to any patient or resident who has a cognitive impairment or who is unable to self-administer their medications. Personal care workers can continue to assist competent residents with self-administration.

These changes will reduce clinical risk, improving outcomes for residents. It will subsequently reduce the incidence of hospitalisation of residents (as a result of medication errors) and the demand that this places on the acute hospital settings. Nurses use the medication round not only to deliver prescribed treatments but to assess the resident’s condition, engage in clinical decision-making, and detect early signs of deterioration. This strengthens continuity of care, supports early intervention, and ensures the delivery of wholistic, safe, person-centred care.

Secretary of the ANMF (Vic Branch) Maddy Harradence said, ‘This legislation supports nurses to do the job they are qualified to do – medication administration is a core nursing responsibility and an essential part of delivering safe, high-quality, person-centred care. These changes also mean nurses are working to their full scope and therefore more likely to experience positive job satisfaction.’


About us:

The ANMF (Vic Branch) has over 110,000 members – nurses, midwives and aged care personal care workers – across the Victorian health and aged care sectors.


Contact details:

Media contact: Liz Ascroft 0498 556 231

Media

More from this category

  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 12/12/2025
  • 10:11
Cosette Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

Termination of Proposed Acquisition of Mayne Pharma

BRIDGEWATER, N.J.–BUSINESS WIRE– Cosette Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (Cosette), a U.S.-based, fully integrated pharmaceutical company, confirms that on 9 December 2025 it served a notice on…

  • Contains:
  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 12/12/2025
  • 08:55
Royal Australian College of GPs

Universal Health Coverage Day: RACGP calls out need for better funding for chronic conditions and preventive care

Specialist GPs have marked International Universal Health Coverage (UHC) Day by joining the World Health Organization in highlighting the devastating impact of health costs. The Royal Australian College of GPs (RACGP) has stressed that a public health system which forces patients with complex or chronic conditions to pay out of pocket for longer consultations can’t claim to offer universal coverage, and urged governments to protect patients from financial hardship. “Health is a human right,” RACGP President Dr Michael Wright said. “Australia recognises the right of everyone to the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health, and our governments are…

  • Contains:
  • Medical Health Aged Care, Women
  • 12/12/2025
  • 01:00
Breast Cancer Trials

Simple blood tests could help tailor treatment for aggressive breast cancer

Key Facts: Blood tests detecting circulating tumour DNA could help guide treatment for triple negative breast cancer patients Absence of tumour DNA in blood…

  • Contains:

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.