Camera IconThe NSW Government is taking action as hundreds of patients lay in hospital beds waiting on Commonwealth aged care or NDIS placements before they can leave. Image: NewsWire Credit: Supplied

A growing backlog of patients unable to leave NSW hospitals because they are waiting for Commonwealth-funded aged care or NDIS support has prompted the State Government to step in and take action.

Almost 1300 hospital beds across the state are occupied by patients who cannot be discharged because they need Commonwealth funding for aged care or NDIS support.

The situation worsened over the past year, when the number of stranded patients in NSW hospital beds increased more than 46 per cent from 871 to 1279 between March 2025 to 2026.

Camera IconAlmost 1300 hospital beds across NSW are occupied by patients who cannot be discharged because they need Commonwealth funding for aged care or NDIS support. Christian Gilles / NewsWire Credit: News Corp Australia

Older patients waiting for an aged care placement surged almost 60 per cent to 948, while 348 people remained in hospital beds waiting for NDIS support, up about 20 per cent.

Read more...

NDIS applications typically take about 56 days to be approved.

Aged care assessments can take about one month for urgent cases, and up to 11 months for standard applications.

Discharge delays in the public health system prompted a NSW Productivity and Quality Commission Inquiry to review the situation – with recommendations due in November.

Camera IconNSW Health Minister Ryan Park announced the State Government would pursue its own strategy to address the Commonwealth’s bed block to provide more in-home care services and patient referrals to community services. NewsWire / Nikki Short Credit: News Corp Australia

It will run alongside a national Hospital Discharge Joint Taskforce, co-led by the Commonwealth and NSW Governments to improve outcomes for stranded patients due to delayed access to aged care and NDIS placements.

But the state government will now pursue its own strategy to fix the “Commonwealth Government’s bed block” across NSW public hospitals to provide more in-home care and patient referrals to community based services.

Minister for Health Ryan Park said every day 1300 patients were unable to leave hospital because they were waiting for a Commonwealth aged care or NDIS placement.

Camera IconHealth Minister Ryan Park said the NSW Government was effectively subsidising the Commonwealth in its duty to provide aged care places. NewsWire / Nikki Short Credit: News Corp Australia

“The NSW Government is effectively subsidising the Commonwealth in its duty to provide aged care places,” he said.

“The growth in the number of stranded Commonwealth aged care patients in our health system is unsustainable, and the Commonwealth has left the NSW Government with no choice but to devise its own plan.

“While the NSW Government is pursuing its own plan to address bed block, this is by no means a signal to the Commonwealth that they are relieved of their responsibility to deliver aged care placements.”

In this year’s budget, the Federal Government announced $3bn to deliver more aged care beds and better home care for older Australians.

Minister for Aged Care and Seniors Sam Rae said the funding would make sure the system was strong and fair enough to meet demand.

Originally published as NSW Government steps in as hundreds of patients stuck in hospital beds waiting on Commonwealth support

Get the latest news from thewest.com.au in your inbox.

Sign up for our emails