Calgary Herald

Publicly funded elder care best route for seniors

It’ll improve quality of lives, writes Rebecca Graff-McRae

- Rebecca Graff-McRae is a research manager for the Parkland Institute.

Elder care should not be an industry. Decisions about caring for our aging population should be made based on best practice and the highest achievable standards of care, not on “business sense” that prioritize­s cost-cutting, understaff­ing and profit-making while treating our elders as consumers.

Tammy Leach of the Alberta Continuing Care Associatio­n (an industry associatio­n), tries to make the case that “a swelling senior population with increasing­ly complex needs” requires a “diverse continuing care industry.”

However, the selective statistics — and indeed, the very language she deploys — paint only a partial picture of what it means to “put our seniors first” in Alberta.

The various delivery models for elder care are not equal. Research for the Parkland Institute by Dave Campanella, comparing the Alberta elder care landscape to national and internatio­nal studies, confirmed that publicly run facilities provide more hours of care to residents than those operated by private or non-profit organizati­ons.

Of the three categories, only publicly run facilities came close to the best-practice benchmark of 4.1 direct care hours per resident day — providing on average a full hour of care more than their non-profit and private counterpar­ts.

Public facilities provided residents with the highest level of staff time from registered nurses and health-care aides, while non-profit facilities provided residents significan­tly more time with licensed practical nurses. Private facilities provided residents below-average levels of care from each type of staff.

According to Statistics Canada’s long-term care facilities survey, between 2011 and 2013, only public facilities spent most of their revenue on nursing staff (RNs, LPNs and aides) — 59 per cent of their total revenue. In comparison, private facilities spent 48 per cent of their revenue on nursing staff over that same period, and non-profit facilities just 44 per cent.

On the whole, private facilities do not offer the same levels of direct, skilled or complex care as public.

In numerous studies, staffing levels are directly correlated to patient care.

The facilities lauded by Leach for budgetfrie­ndly buildings are mainly comprised of supportive living units, not the more complex types of long-term care or dementia care units, which require increasing­ly specialize­d equipment and security features.

It is these elders with complex and diverse needs to whom Leach alludes to in the headline, but the majority of beds added since 2015 have been designated for much lower levels of care.

Even the small percentage of dementia and long-term care beds created via Affordable Supportive Living Initiative funding had to be fiercely negotiated by the current government for inclusion.

While Leach observes, correctly, that “All continuing care providers, regardless of ownership type, are held to the same government-set standards and accountabi­lities,” these are minimum standards. On the whole, private facilities do not offer the same levels of direct, skilled or complex care as public.

Designated supportive living facilities also operate under much looser standards than those providing long-term care, with no requiremen­t for minimum staffing levels.

Privately run facilities also allocate significan­tly higher resources to administra­tion than public facilities — a finding backed up by the Canadian Institute for Health Informatio­n.

Every dollar spent on administra­tion is money not spent on front-line care.

Why then, is Leach “concerned” about “recent investment­s announced … by government to open new public continuing care spaces,” when those public spaces have been consistent­ly shown by peer-reviewed research to provide better quality of care?

Her bottom line argument simply doesn’t stand up: how is it more cost effective to use public funds to subsidize private organizati­ons?

If we truly hope to “put our seniors first” as a province, we must consider how publicly funded and delivered elder care can work alongside our health-care system to provide services that keep them at home longer, keep them out of hospital longer, and preserve their quality of life. That is the best investment we can make.

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