The Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety's final report has laid out an extensive plan to overhaul Australia’s aged-care system.
Among the 148 recommendations, the report calls for a new system underpinned by a rights-based Act, funding based on need, and much stronger regulation and transparency.
Watch: A man with early Alzheimer's brings Q+A host to tears when discussing aged care. Post continues below.
Over two years, through more than 10,500 submissions and 600 witnesses, the two commissioners heard extensive evidence of a system in crisis.
Australians might have expected the commissioners to provide one streamlined blueprint for reform.
But the commissioners diverged on a number of large and some smaller recommendations. This makes the already complex path to reform even more confusing. It reduces the power of the final report. More disappointingly, it gives the government room to pick and choose recommendations as the cabinet likes.
Nonetheless, if the major recommendations are adopted, Australia will get a transformed aged care system over the next five years.