Calgary Herald

Care homes under scanner

Saskatchew­an auditor highlights problems

- JENNIFER GRAHAM

The Saskatchew­an government says it’s working on a plan to improve how problems are handled at personal care homes after the provincial auditor said many concerns have gone unchecked for years.

Auditor Bonnie Lysyk said in a report this week that the Ministry of Health documented inspection results at personal care homes, but she said officials did not have a good system for tracking and following up on problems that were found.

Some of those problems included urgent safety issues like scalding hot water, medication­s not properly recorded or blocked fire exits.

“Without more frequent inspection­s of homes at high risk, vulnerable residents may be left in unsafe situations for long periods,” she wrote.

Health Minister Dustin Duncan said Wednesday that he accepted the auditor’s findings.

“I think for anybody it’s disappoint­ing and discouragi­ng to hear that we still have situations like that and that a better job needs to be done in following up on inspection­s that may have these deficienci­es pointed out,” said Duncan.

“I’m like anyone, you know if this is a member of my family or constituen­t, I want to make sure that they’re living in the best possible conditions,” he added.

“For our seniors and among the most vulnerable in our population­s, we need to work better with the personal care homes to make sure that we don’t have these situations in the future.”

Part of the problem is that there’s no central log for compliance issues. That means the ministry must rely on its staff to remember or search extensive paper records to outline the history of a particular home, according to the auditor’s report.

The report makes five recommenda­tions, including that high-risk personal care homes be inspected more frequently. It also says the ministry should publicly report inspection results.

“It could motivate prompt response from personal care homes and help to reduce the risk of improper care to these vulnerable residents,” said the auditor.

Duncan said it’s time to update systems so that licences and compliance issues are all done electronic­ally.

He also said the government is looking at posting inspection results online so that people can see how personal care homes fared.

“Right now, in fact, under the legislatio­n and the regulation­s, we cannot publicly report that. So we’ve already identified a way forward to be able to do that through changes to the regulation­s that we’ll be bringing forward next year,” said Duncan.

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