Skip to content
General News, Medical Health Aged Care

New report links ageism to serious healthcare harms

Australian Human Rights Commission 2 mins read

Thursday, 20 November 2025  

New report links ageism to serious healthcare harms 

Older Australians are feeling dismissed, excluded and stereotyped in healthcare settings, putting their access to life-saving care at risk, according to a new report by the Australian Human Rights Commission. 

Titled The age barrier: older adults’ experiences of ageism in health care, the report draws on the lived experiences of older patients, their families and sector experts, supported by a comprehensive literature review. It found that perceptions of ageism are widespread across all levels of the health system – from how older people are treated by staff to broader systemic and policy issues. 

‘This report holds a mirror up to our health system. It reflects the voices of older people who have too often felt unseen, unheard or undervalued,’ said Age Discrimination Commissioner Robert Fitzgerald AM. 

‘People told us they felt rushed through the system, treated like a burden, a caricature, just another number. They described being dismissed by medical staff, spoken down to, excluded from decisions about their own care and having conversations directed to their family members instead of them.  

‘Many said their concerns were ignored, their autonomy overlooked and assumptions made based solely on their age. 

‘Ageism is the enemy of healthy ageing and has serious consequences. It is linked to poorer health outcomes, delayed recovery, reduced quality of life and even earlier death.’ 

The report recommends urgent action across three key areas: 

  • Collaboration within the health sector to review clinical guidelines, improve training, and co-design age-inclusive models of care with older adults 

  • Raising awareness and challenging bias through targeted education and ageism awareness training for health professionals 

  • Strengthening the evidence base by investing in research to measure the impact of ageism and its intersection with other forms of discrimination. 

Solutions

To help address these issues, the Commission has launched a new project aimed at the health sector. Through targeted workshops with health workers and consumers, it aims to build awareness of age bias, and support more inclusive, person-centred care across government, non-government and community health settings. 

‘We recognise the dedication of our health professionals and the pressures they face,’ Commissioner Fitzgerald said. ‘But as our population ages, demand on health services will only grow. This is an urgent moment for us to find out how care can be improved. 

‘This report is not about blame. It is an invitation to doctors, nurses, allied health staff and their employers to work with us toward generational reform. To build a system where every person is treated with dignity, empathy and respect, not as a stereotype, but as a human being.’ 

Earlier this year, the Commission released a report on systemic racism in healthcare, highlighting how cultural stereotypes and dismissive treatment undermine care, particularly for First Peoples. Discrimination compounds when age biases also exist. 

Watch a video of Commissioner Fitzgerald talking through the findings here. 

ENDS | Media contact: [email protected] or 0457 281 897 (calls only, no texts) 

Media

More from this category

  • General News, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 19/01/2026
  • 09:15
January 19, 2026

Concerning myopia rates amongst “indoor generation”

As we approach the 2026 school year, optometrists are encouraging parents to make outdoor play a priority for their children this school year with new data from Bupa Optical revealing that 27 per cent of Australian children who underwent an eye test last year were diagnosed with myopia. Spending time outdoorshas been proven to be beneficial for reducing myopia risk amongst children however outdoor play is on the decline with separate research noting that 50 per cent of kids reported not being allowed to play outside alone or with friends at various times. Additionally, a quarter of Aussie kids say…

  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 19/01/2026
  • 08:30
Lanham Media on behalf of Heart Research Australia

Why Stress Is Quietly Breaking Our Hearts – and How to Reset This REDFEB

Media release Why Stress Is Quietly Breaking Our Hearts - and How to Reset ThisREDFEB With cost-of-living pressure rising in recent years, stress has become the silent epidemic of modern life - and it’s quietly breaking our hearts. Health experts warn that chronic stress is compromising how our hearts function, increasing the risk of cardiovascular disease, heart attack and even sudden cardiac events. Recent national data shows[i] that nearly half of Australians say financial worries are the biggest factor affecting their wellbeing, while more than a third of workers report feeling burnt out every week. “Most people think of stress…

  • General News, Women
  • 19/01/2026
  • 00:05
GasbagPR

New Study: Nature Walks Boost Women’s Mental Health and Longevity

Key Facts: Researchers tracked more than 400 women, measuring outcomes before and after training for Coastrek, and comparing results with a control group “Nature…

  • 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.