Aged Care Services Minister Richard Colbeck has dismissed suggestions he should resign while defending his declaration the sector is not in crisis, amid growing criticism of the government's handling of widespread COVID-19 outbreaks and record deaths.
The aged care sector has been under immense pressure this summer, with peak aged care groups saying Australia should have been better prepared for another COVID-19 variant like Omicron.
Health bureaucrats have told a parliamentary committee 2022 has already been the deadliest year for aged care residents since the start of the pandemic, with 691 residents dying in COVID-19 outbreaks compared with 282 deaths in 2021 and 685 in 2020.
Almost one-third of the country's residential aged care homes are currently battling coronavirus outbreaks, with 915 of the country's 2900 facilities affected.
The outbreaks have also seen massive staff shortages and thousands of residents isolated in their rooms.
Already under scrutiny, criticism of the government's handling of the sector intensified further after Senator Colbeck was forced to defend attending an Ashes Test match instead of a parliamentary committee hearing investigating COVID-19 in aged care homes at the height of the Omicron outbreak.
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