Cape Breton Post

Nursing homes left with one bed for COVID.

- JIM VIBERT SALTWIRE NETWORK  jim.vibert@saltwire.com  @JimVibert Journalist and writer Jim Vibert has worked as a communicat­ions advisor to five Nova Scotia government­s.

Some of Nova Scotia’s nursing home administra­tors felt blindsided last week when the province told them to reduce the number of beds they’re keeping vacant – in case of COVID – to just one.

Before the Department of Health and Wellness (DHW) edict, many nursing homes had been holding up to three per cent of their beds vacant so they’d have some room to isolate residents who test positive for COVID-19, when and if needed.

The three-per cent solution was an agreement between the homes and the province. The decision to reduce the number of vacant beds to one per home was made unilateral­ly by the province.

Last month, the government announced that it was setting up six regional care units (RCU) across the province – all but one are in hospitals – where nursing home residents who test positive for COVID-19 will be transferre­d, quarantine­d and cared for.

Now that those units have been establishe­d, DHW says keeping three per cent of nursing home beds vacant is no longer necessary, and that those empty beds are needed.

The department says that its RCU plan supports the safety of long-term care residents, while ensuring that those Nova Scotians waiting for a bed in a nursing home don’t wait too long.

Homes are being asked to keep just one room vacant so there’s a place to isolate a resident who tests positive for COVID-19, until that individual can be transferre­d to the regional care unit.

But the nursing homes worry that what little flexibilit­y they had in trying to contain a COVID out-break is gone, along with their vacant beds.

One home administra­tor, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the government doesn’t like its “partners” to step out of line, said the loss of the three per cent cushion will make isolating residents more difficult, and in some cases impossible.

That’s partly because the nursing homes need to isolate residents both when they’re coming and going.

As a precaution, any new resident admitted to a nursing home needs to complete 14-days of isolation before he or she can interact with other residents and move freely about the facility.

So, nursing homes are concerned that their allotted single vacant bed won’t be vacant much at all, but instead occupied by an incoming resident when it’s needed to isolate a current resident who tests positive for COVID-19.

Nova Scotia, like most jurisdicti­ons across Canada, has a chronic shortage of nursing home beds. Acute care beds in hospitals are often occupied by Nova Scotians who are awaiting placement in long-term care, where demand for beds exceeds supply at the best of times, and these are most decidedly not the best of times.

While a handful of the province’s larger homes and long-term care providers have establishe­d in-house units to isolate and care for residents should they develop COVID, the majority of homes will look to the province’s regional care units to take in any of their residents who test positive.

The designated RCU in the central region, where the vast majority of Nova Scotia’s 95 current COVID-19 cases are located, is Ocean View Continuing Care Centre in Eastern Passage, but staffing up its unit has been a problem.

On its website, Ocean View continues to run a recruitmen­t ad under the heading, “We have an IMMEDIATE NEED FOR COVID-19 WORKERS for our REGIONAL CARE UNIT.”

Ocean View, DHW and Nova Scotia Health are all working to resolve the staffing problem.

In the meantime, if staffing at Ocean View prevents it from taking in residents of other nursing homes, the health authority says those residents will be cared for in place, in their current nursing homes.

The province’s plan to move, isolate and care for nursing home residents who get COVID isn’t perfect, but it’s a far sight better than the response during the province’s first fatal brush with the virus in the spring.

Back then, once the virus gained a foothold in a crowded nursing home, it could spread like wild-fire through the facility, as it did in Northwood’s Halifax nursing home where 53 of Nova Scotia’s 65 deaths from COVID-19 occurred.

To date, 12 per cent of Canada’s COVID-19 cases have been in long-term care facilities, but more than 75 per cent of the nation’s COVID deaths have occurred there.

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