Medicine Hat News

Private nursing home owners under pressure as COVID-19 exposes flaws

- DAN HEALING

CALGARY

The owners of Canada’s private nursing homes are under increasing pressure from investors and critics alike as infections and deaths from the COVID-19 outbreak continue among the country’s oldest and most vulnerable citizens.

Share prices of three of Canada’s publicly traded nursing home owners have fallen by at least a third this year while labour organizati­ons and NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh call for the eliminatio­n of private ownership and at least two class-action lawsuits have been proposed.

On Wednesday, Ontario Premier Doug Ford said the province will take over management of five long-term care homes, four of which were named in a Canadian Armed Forces report detailing recent “horrific” treatment of residents.

Shares in Sienna Senior Living Inc., operator of two of the homes falling under provincial control, plunged by 6.8 per cent on Thursday to close at $9.84, a near 10-year low that’s almost half their $19.64 close on Feb. 18.

The company runs the Altamont Care Community in Scarboroug­h, Ont., named in the Armed Forces report for inadequate care and feeding of residents due to insufficie­nt staffing during the pandemic. The virus is blamed for 52 deaths there.

“COVID-19 has had a severe impact on staffing at Altamont. To deliver the level of care that our seniors deserve, the staffing challenges we face in the long-term care sector must be addressed,” said Sienna in a statement posted on its website on Tuesday.

Sienna also operates the Camilla Care Centre in Mississaug­a, Ont., where the province is also taking over operations after at least 61 residents died from the coronaviru­s.

Sienna declined an interview request Thursday.

Meanwhile, shares in two other Canadian nursing home operators also fell Thursday, although neither was mentioned in the military’s report.

Extendicar­e Inc. slipped one per cent for a total drop of 33 per cent so far this year and Chartwell Retirement Residences fell 3.2 per cent for a year-to-date slide of 41 per cent.

“A large number of seniors care facilities getting impacted by COVID-19 cases in Canada and the U.S. has created a sense of anxiety about the future profitabil­ity of this industry,” said analyst Yashwant Sankpal of Laurentian Bank Securities in a report.

He pointed out the crisis could eventually lead to more public investment in the sector to allow upgrades to older, crowded facilities that need it most, which would benefit the companies he covers.

Owners of facilities in Canada agree there are many things wrong with the longterm care system but say private ownership is not one of them.

A preliminar­y analysis by the Ontario Long Term Care Associatio­n, which represents both private and public facilities, showed that the magnitude of the outbreak hasn’t varied according to ownership.

Instead, severity depended on whether the outbreak started before the province implemente­d its support program, the staffing situation before and during the outbreak, if the home is older and more crowded with four-bed shared rooms, and the amount of external support when needed.

“Nearly half of Ontario’s long-term care homes are older, and infection control, cohorting and isolation are more challengin­g in these sites,” said the statement attributed to CEO Donna Duncan.

It added that a provincial program designed to rebuild older homes by 2025 is behind schedule.

The assertion contradict­s a call from the Canadian Labour Congress to eliminate private ownership and put long-term care under federal jurisdicti­on.

“The tragedy we’re seeing is a direct result of the move to a for-profit model. Long-term care must be offered as a public service,” said CLC president Hassan Yussuff in a news release.

As Canada’s population ages, statistics show spending on long-term care is up.

Operating revenue for nursing and residentia­l care facilities controlled by private organizati­ons grew by 25 per cent from $9.3 billion in 2014 to $11.6 billion in 2018, according to the most recent data from Statistics Canada.

Operating revenue for facilities controlled by public organizati­ons grew by 12 per cent from $15 billion to $16.8 billion in the same four years, it says.

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