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AAP
AAP
Politics
Daniel McCulloch

Catholics warn of aged care jab blind spot

Aged care providers want community workers included in a vaccine mandate. (AAP)

Aged care providers have warned of a coronavirus blind spot if community workers are not included in a vaccine mandate.

Catholic Health Australia, which represents residential and home-based aged care providers, has urged national cabinet to close the loophole.

The mandate does not apply to 150,000 aged care workers who care for one million older Australians living in the community.

Chief executive Pat Garcia said the community aged care workforce needed just as much protection as staff in nursing homes.

"Our workers need to feel confident in going out into the community just as the community needs to feel confident about letting them into their homes," he said on Friday.

"If anything, given their role is to go out and about into the community these workers should be given absolute priority for protection."

National cabinet has decided to make coronavirus vaccinations mandatory for all residential aged care workers.

Staff will need to receive the first dose by mid-September to continue working in the sector.

The federal government is giving aged care providers $11 million in grants to support employees getting vaccines.

Casual workers will be paid $80 per dose to go off-site for vaccinations.

They will also be given $185 for a day's sick leave if they feel unwell and have no other entitlements.

Aged care facilities will be offered up to $500 to cover the costs of facilitating access to vaccines for their workers.

"This will cover transport services, arranging groups of workers to be vaccinated and any other reasonable expenses that support workers to get vaccinated," Aged Care Services Minister Richard Colbeck said.

A third of aged care workers have received at least one coronavirus jab.

Senior army officer John Frewen, who is heading the vaccination program, said every aged care facility in the country was on track to receive their first and second dose vaccination visits by the end of Friday.

Lieutenant-General Frewen is satisfied with vaccination rates among older Australians.

"We're now at more than 70 per cent of our over-70s on first dose," he told reporters in Canberra.

"Over the weeks ahead, many of them will be getting their second dose of AstraZeneca, so the fully vaccinated rates in that most vulnerable cohort will also rise."

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