Business View Oceania | April/May 2022

81 82 BUSINESS VIEW OCEANIA VOLUME 4, ISSUE 4 BUSINESS VIEW OCEANIA VOLUME 4, ISSUE 4 CONCENTR I C HEALTH GROUP from a cookie cutter approach for every single person for a variety of different reasons. But the end result is that everyone gets the same thing. And in society, that’s not normal. We as non- residential aged care residents get access to whatever services we need in a timely manner. And that should be the case for residents living in an aged care home, as well.” new venture for the practice, and adding enhanced technology will help them expand even more. “I think the next 24 months are a really great opportunity for us to integrate and enhance our tech offering to make that process easier for everyone to work together,” Young says. “At the moment, technology is one of the main bottlenecks with regards to effective multidisciplinary care within the disability sector.” The future is looking bright for Concentric’s aged care sector. As Young confides, “We are really keen to expand our rehabilitation model within the aged-care sector to make it far more individualised, rather than a cookie cutter approach. The way I explained this to the team is, just because you live in a residential aged care setting, it shouldn’t limit your ability to access the services that you need as an individual. I think residential care has suffered PREFERRED VENDOR/PARTNER n PACE, The University of Adelaide https://www.adelaide.edu.au/pace | pace@adelaide.edu.au Empowering you, your staff and your organisation to achieve the best outcome. PACE has built an established record for excellence in the delivery of custom training, education services, and learning solutions. Working with businesses across all sectors, we have extensive experience in providing high quality, professional development programs to deliver industry-lead expertise and work-ready training.

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