The Peterborough Examiner

Province’s patient ombudsman launches long-term-care probe

Office says 150 complaints about safety of residents and staff have been made

- ALLISON JONES THE CANADIAN PRESS

Ontario’s patient ombudsman launched an investigat­ion into long-term care Tuesday, a day after the provincial ombudsman began a similar one, and as the province took over management at an eighth long-termcare home.

The patient ombudsman’s office had asked staff, family members, caregivers and residents to contact them with concerns about the safety of staff and residents, and since March there have been 150 complaints.

“Complaints from residents, family members and whistleblo­wers pointed to a crisis in Ontario’s long-term-care homes,” the office said in a statement.

This investigat­ion will be specific to the experience­s of residents and caregivers at longterm-care homes with COVID-19 outbreaks, and separate from an Ontario ombudsman investigat­ion, the patient ombudsman’s office said.

The role of patient ombudsman has been vacant for two years, since now-Health Minister Christine Elliott quit to return to politics.

The Ontario ombudsman investigat­ion will look at systemic aspects of long-term care, including complaint handling, emergency planning, data collection, infection and death rates and communicat­ion with residents, staff and the public. Ombudsman Paul Dube said he started his probe because of what he read in a recent military report on five long-termcare homes in Ontario.

Ontario called in military assistance for five homes dealing with COVID-19 outbreaks in April. Members said they observed cockroach infestatio­ns, aggressive feeding that caused choking, bleeding infections, and residents crying for help for hours. The government has also announced an independen­t commission into long-term care, and Premier Doug Ford has said he’s hopeful it will be establishe­d in July.

According to the Ministry of Long-Term Care, 1,652 residents and seven staff members have died amid COVID-19 outbreaks in the facilities. The number of active outbreaks reported Tuesday dropped from 112 to 105.

Some facilities are still struggling to manage outbreaks, and the province has appointed hospitals to take over the management of eight facilities, including four of the five that were the subject of the military report.

Provincial­ly, Ontario reported 446 new COVID-19 cases Tuesday, and 17 more deaths. That brings the provincial total to 28,709 cases — a 1.6 per cent increase over the previous day.

 ?? RICHARD LAUTENS TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ?? Seven long-term-care staff members have died amid the COVID-19 outbreak in Ontario.
RICHARD LAUTENS TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO Seven long-term-care staff members have died amid the COVID-19 outbreak in Ontario.

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