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Long-term care reports are shameful

Letter To the Editor:

Cockroaches. Inadequate personal protective equipment. Our parents, our grandparents, our siblings, our friends, forced to sit and live in soiled clothing for hours, Care staff underpaid, overworked and laboring under the most stressful of circumstances.

The reports out last week that confirmed suspicions regarding the conditions in long-term care facilities in Quebec and here in Ontario have been saddening, sickening and down-right shameful. Our society, our communities will, undoubtedly, face a number of varying reckonings on the other side of COVID-19. At the top of that list should be the situation in our long term care facilities.

There are good LTCHs. There are good LTCHs locally, in the Quinte region. My grandmother spent the final eight years of her life in one and for the most part my family have glowing things to say about the care and treatment she received while in care. Everytime I went to see her, I left the building with a new appreciation and respect for the staff and what their day-to-day consists of.

So let’s start there, with the front-line staff who all too often take the brunt of the blame when things go poorly. Think about doing their job on the BEST day, let alone during a global pandemic. These front-line workers are the glue of our communities. They volunteer to coach your kid’s soccer team. They’re your neighbour. They’re on your softball team. So why are we okay with them being so overworked and underpaid? Why do so many of them have to work at multiple facilities just to make ends meet?

The root, systemic problems that plague the industry are underfunding and lack of oversight.
Now let’s talk about the political will to address these concerns. Why are we even considering political platforms that threaten to cut funding to our healthcare system and jeopardize the well-being of front-line staff and patients? Signs that show support for them are wonderful,but when the time comes to actually support these people, put your vote where your lawn signs or hashtags are.

Beyond the surface, the state of the industry is a microcosm of deeper inequality concerns. The data is there for everyone via a simple Google search. Studies show LTCHs are largely serviced by women, mostly populated by women, and staffed on the front lines by workers coming from marginalized communities. We have an opportunity here to empower them by providing them with much better training and development and putting them in positions to flourish. These are human beings we are entrusting to care for other human beings. They matter, their concerns matter and they need to be heard and they need to be provided the tools and bandwidth to excel at their jobs, not simply struggle to tread water. A more empowered employee is also a more empowered community member, so the payoff is well worth the investment.

If we can’t rise to this challenge, then what are our other options? Perhaps we could take a page out of a number of other culture’s playbooks and begin caring for the elderly in our own homes. Long term care facilities are harder to find outside of North America, the expectation being that you will take in and take care of your elderly family members when the time comes. However, history has shown that this is not our preference, so surely the focus needs to be on drastically improving the system we have now.

At the core, these reports are a human rights concern. LTCHs fall under provincial governance, a handy out for any encumbered Premier who needs to pass the buck and blame the feds for a lack of funding from Ottawa but with the amount of outrage the reports have generated, none of that matters. This can’t be a partisan political issue, it just can’t be. More people will die while back benchers bicker.

So here we are again, Canada. Do we really care? Or are we just going to talk in platitudes over and over again like we’ve done so far with Reconciliation? Are we going to demand change? Are we going to demand that our seniors, the people who built the communities we live in today, are treated with dignity in these facilities moving forward? That they’re treated like people and not cattle? The time for government-speak is over. If you have a loved one in a care home and are concerned for their well-being, what is your appetite for watching another man in a suit utter the words “provincial jurisdiction”?

It’s time to roll up our sleeves and fix our LTCHs with a similar deployment of agility and urgency to how we reacted to COVID-19 in the first place. The problems are in plain view: lacks in funding, oversight and accountability. All sides – governments, unions, facilities management – need to take a long, hard look in the mirror to see if there is a will to turn platitudes into policies.

Mark Rose
Unsuccessful municipal council candidate
Picton

Filed Under: Letters and OpinionNews from Everywhere Else

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  1. Dennis Fox says:

    I find it appalling that in the year 2020 that we are having this conversation at all. When did we stop respecting the elderly in Canada? To hear that people were allowed to starve or die from dehydration, or to go days without being cleaned while in a LTC, I still find hard to accept. The question I have is – Why did it take the military to expose this? Where were the owners, or doctors, nurses or general staff? Why didn’t any of those people report the problem. I believe everyone owning or working in those facilities jointly own this responsibility. Whether the Ford Government wants one or not – a public inquiry must take place to get to the root of this problem – the systematic devaluing of helpless seniors.

  2. Diana says:

    I would like to start by saying, residents of LTC are also husbands and wives but no one ever seems to says that.

    I totally agree that there is a huge problem in LTCH very apparent before Covid 19 and even more now. The staff in LTC could not look after their residents then but take away families and paid support workers that resident’s families pay for on top of the monthly costs so their loved one had some one on one attention and the whole system falls apart.

    The decision to put a loved one in LTC is excrusitiong, made even more so if you have already had a parent or spouse in the system previously.

    There however comes a time when you have to consider the decision again. If presented with a spouse that cannot get out of bed physically, will not eat and has lost considerable weight what are you to do. Care can sometimes be just to much for the caregiver. The LHIN will give you a hour visit twice a day and then a four hour block for your own use. If you live out of town you can hardly go to the bank in an hour let alone do your grocery shopping or get your hair cut, when and if we can ever get our hair cut again.

    Governments at all levels must address this problem but I am not holding my breath that this will be a quick fix. The target of four hours of care over person in LTC will cost an extra $500,000 per year in one of the local care homes, multiply that by the 600 plus facilities in this province. If Mr Ford and Mr Trudeau come up with this type of money I will eat my shirt.

    I do however hope they will both step up. I do live in hope.

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