A+
large
A
small
invert
colour
Group 3
reset

Our stories


Today in Australia, 2,067 younger people with disability under 65 years of age are forced to live in aged care. Almost half are in a partner relationship, and more than 1 in 4 are parents of school age children.

Some of these people are aged in their 30s and 40s, living with people in their 80s. They rarely see family or friends and it is common for young people living in aged care to lose skills and independence. People with disability must have access to the support they need to be in control of where and how they live and who they live with.

The Summer Foundation connects with people with disability to share their personal stories. Read and watch stories that show the impact of living in aged care:

Angela

Watch more stories

Kate’s story

Andrew’s story

James’ story


These are the facts so far:

At least 26 people (under 65 years old) a month continue to enter aged care.

More than 10,000 people under 65 have died in aged care in the past 10 years. If a young person goes into aged care, they have a 90 percent chance of dying or getting stuck there until they age out and are no longer counted.