Medicine Hat News

Long-term care still struggles with rampant COVID-19 cases as Omicron wave levels off

- LAURA OSMAN

It’s difficult to forget the tragic scenes that played out in long-term care homes across the country in the early days of the pandemic as residents died in the thousands, isolated from their loved ones.

While vaccines have played a major role in protecting homes from the same deadly toll the first wave of COVID-19 took on residents, the impact has still been profound during the Omicron wave.

“It’s staggering when you just look at the number of homes in outbreak,” said Dr. Samir Sinha, director of health policy research at the National Institute on Aging.

“It’s just so sad when you think that in the last few weeks we’ve lost over 300 residents and just how unforgivin­g this pandemic has been, especially to those people living in our long-term care and retirement homes.”

More than 34 per cent of Canada’s 6,029 longterm care homes are experienci­ng an outbreak, the NIA’s latest figures show.

That’s twice as many homes as the second highest peak in long-term care outbreaks, when 1,000 homes were infected last January, Sinha said.

The number of outbreaks has continued to increase since the Omicron wave first struck in mid-December, according to the Public Health Agency of Canada.

And just in the last few days Canada marked the 16,000th death in long-term care since the pandemic began.

COVID-19 has also severely restricted the already short-staffed sector, as workers in the home have fallen ill and had to isolate.

That’s led to concerns about the level of care residents are left with, and the potential for the suffering and deaths of residents who don’t have the virus.

“It is very serious, what’s going on,” said Carole Estabrooks, scientific director of the pan-Canadian Translatin­g Research in Elder Care program at the University of Alberta.

The latest wave has also renewed fears about restrictiv­e isolation measures, Estabrooks said in an interview with The Canadian Press.

Research is beginning to show the heavy toll prolonged isolation has taken on residents, Estabrooks said.

“It’s causing deteriorat­ion and debilitati­on. There are early reports that suggests there have been excess mortality, excess death rates, because of the isolation,” she said.

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