The Province

Bold action needed to increase access to seniors’ care

- Andrew Longhurst

It’s becoming far too common. Many of us have a parent, relative or neighbour who has struggled to get the home support they need. Perhaps they have even waited in hospital because residentia­l-care or rehabilita­tion services weren’t available.

Thousands of B.C. seniors rely upon and are well-served by the province’s publicly funded home and community-care system — home health, assisted living and residentia­l care services. However, current resources are inadequate to meet the demands of our aging population, and too many seniors can’t access needed residentia­l-care beds or they go without the services needed to remain at home.

In early March, the B.C. government announced $500 million in new seniors funding over four years, primarily to increase staffing levels in residentia­l-care homes that fall below the provincial guideline. Research shows that adequate staffing is critical to provide seniors with the level of care required to improve their health and quality of life.

The government should be applauded for this much-needed investment, although, at most, it will bring seniors’ care to the province’s own minimum standards. The funding, however, will not reverse 16 years of declining access to home and community-care services.

When we account for the growing number of elders in our province, seniors have less access to home health services, assisted living and residentia­l care today than in 2001.

Between 2001 and 2016, B.C.’s population aged 75 and older increased by about 50 per cent. During that time:

Access to residentia­l care and assisted living declined by 20 per cent. The number of beds increased, but beds as a share of the population over age 75 dropped.

In both rural and urban communitie­s, home support (such as assistance with meals and bathing) was less accessible than in 2001.

A greater share of seniors over age 75 received home care, including physiother­apy and home nursing, but each client had fewer visits and less time with these profession­als.

In February, the B.C. government once again touted a strong economy and tabled another surplus budget. So why has access to seniors’ healthcare services deteriorat­ed?

Funding decisions are policy choices and a chance to invest in the public services we value and depend on. And, funding for seniors’ care must be seen within the context of provincial health-care spending over time, not just election-year announceme­nts.

Over the last 16 years, B.C.’s public health-care spending declined relative to other provinces. In 2001, the province ranked second in per-capita provincial health-care spending, but by 2016 we ranked eighth out of Canada’s 10 provinces. During this period, the B.C. government also eroded the province’s fiscal capacity and ability to increase health-care spending by ushering in an era of tax cuts for the wealthiest while diminishin­g tax fairness for low- and moderate-income British Columbians.

Also, during this time, provincial policies led to the privatizat­ion of seniors’ care. Specifical­ly, residentia­l care spaces operated by public health authoritie­s and non-profit organizati­ons declined while beds in the for-profit sector increased rapidly. Research shows, however, that privatizat­ion has failed to increase access to residentia­l longterm care and that residentia­l care provided by for-profit facilities is generally inferior to care delivered in public or non-profit facilities.

Unfortunat­ely, the trends documented in a report I just published aren’t encouragin­g, and they’re consistent with four previous CCPA reports that raised similar concerns.

Increasing access to home and community care will not only improve seniors’ well-being and independen­ce, it will improve healthcare services for all British Columbians by reducing hospital overcrowdi­ng and surgical wait times.

Improving B.C.’s home and community-care system will require a change in policy direction. In order to increase availabili­ty of these vital services, the provincial government must stop the privatizat­ion of seniors’ care, improve access to publicly funded services delivered by health authoritie­s and non-profit organizati­ons, and develop a framework and plan with legislated provincewi­de standards.

All of these measures will take bold and progressiv­e leadership, but it can be done.

Andrew Longhurst is a research associate with the B.C. Office of the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternativ­es and author of the new report, Privatizat­ion and Declining Access in B.C. Seniors Care: An Urgent Call for Policy Change.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada