You Can Ask for What You Need from Aged Care Services Videos

IN A NUTSHELL
Editor's Note
The short video here encourages older people from culturally & linguistically diverse backgrounds to ask for what they need from Aged Care Services.

The video has been translated into:
English, Arabic, Afrikaans, Armenian, Assyrian, Bengali, Bosnian, Burmese, Simplified Chinese, Traditional Chinese, Croatian, Czech, Dutch, Farsi, French, German, Greek, Gujarati, Hindi, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Khmer, Korean, Macedonian, Maltese, Min Nan, Nepali, Polish, Portuguese, Punjabi, Romanian, Russian, Samoan, Serbian, Sinhalese, Spanish, Tagalog, Tamil, Thai, Turkish, Ukrainian, Urdu & Vietnamese.

It was produced by The Centre for Cultural Diversity in Ageing & Red Hat Films, with support from Australian Multicultural Community Services & Elder Rights Advocacy

By Nikolaus Rittinghausen

Manager 

The Centre for Cultural Diversity in Ageing

PICAC (Partners in Culturally Appropriate Care) Victoria, Australia

 You Can Ask for What You Need from Aged Care Services Videos

 

The Centre for Cultural Diversity in Ageing together with Red Hat Films produced a short video “You can ask for what you need from Aged Care Services,” that encourages older people from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds to ask for what they need from aged care services.

The aim of the film is to raise awareness among consumers from culturally diverse backgrounds about their right to give feedback to an aged care service. It also aims to raise awareness of the importance of culturally appropriate feedback by promoting discussion amongst the aged care sector around some of the barriers facing aged care providers in reaching out and seeking valuable feedback from older people from diverse backgrounds.

The project was developed with funding from the Australian Department of Health and Aged Care under the Partners in Culturally Appropriate Care (PICAC) program and supported by the Australian Multicultural Community Services and Elder Rights Advocacy.

The video has been translated into 45 languages and is available on The Centre’s website:

https://www.culturaldiversity.com.au/resources/multilingual-resources/consumer-voice-film and YouTube channel https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1nUqnLwi-_U&list=PLh7zaZPf9dk714nSFCvUvukoF4pn0PYor

A discussion guide on using this video has been developed and is available through The Centre’s website: https://www.culturaldiversity.com.au/documents/documents/1528-consumer-voice-film-overview-and-discussion-guide-1/file

For more information, contact info@culturaldiversity.com.au

Click HERE to see the previous post on PEAH by the Centre