The Hamilton Spectator

Lawsuits filed against long-term care providers

Extendicar­e, Sienna Senior Living accused of being ‘systemical­ly negligent’

- ADAM BURNS

TORONTO — Proposed classactio­n lawsuits have been filed against a pair of Ontario-based long-term care providers, claiming the companies were “systemical­ly negligent” toward residents in their care.

Statements of claim filed in Ontario Superior Court against Extendicar­e Inc. and Sienna Senior Living Inc., allege the companies breached their fiduciary and contractua­l responsibi­lities to patients.

The suits allege patients were left with untreated bedsores and other ailments, with one woman’s wounds even becoming infested with maggots.

“That is unacceptab­le. It’s simply unacceptab­le,” Amani Oakley, an attorney representi­ng the plaintiffs, told a news conference Thursday in Toronto.

“Nursing homes ... should know that bedsores are a key problem in this demographi­c. There’s a lot of ways to deal with it.”

Oakley’s firm has partnered with two others to form the Nursing Homes Action Coalition, which has launched a website inviting additional plaintiffs to come forward.

“Our office and the offices of the colleagues we’re working with on this are inundated daily with these calls,” said Oakley, surrounded by the family members of some of the plaintiffs named in the suits.

“One of the motivation­s for coming forward with these class actions was the sheer number of times we heard the same stories.”

Jeffrey Novo, whose father Jose Manuel Novo moved into a Sienna property in Brampton in June 2014, said it didn’t take long for him to think “there was something wrong” in the facility.

“He got skinny pretty quick. He didn’t look right — especially when we saw the sores,” said Novo, who claims some of his father’s sores eventually went down to the bone.

“It should never have gotten that bad,” he said. “Something was wrong, I knew it.”

Novo’s father died in My 2016 at the age of 65.

Oakley is calling for government­s to crack down on alleged neglect at long-term care facilities by shutting down offending homes or levying heavy fines, rather than simply “catalogue the abuses.”

Ontario Health and Long-Term Care Minister Helena Jaczek said her government is “continuous­ly working to improve” long-term care in the province.

“This includes new enforcemen­t tools such as financial penalties and provincial offences for operators who repeatedly do not comply” with provincial regulation­s, Jaczek said in a statement.

“We have done more to improve resident safety and wellbeing in this mandate than ever before, and we will continue to take action to ensure transparen­cy in our health-care system.”

New Democrat health critic France Gelinas said Thursday that the Ontario Liberal government hasn’t done enough to protect residents of long-term care homes, who often have nowhere else to go.

“We know that there is a captive audience of very vulnerable seniors, and in many homes they are not getting the care they need,” said Gelinas, who called bedsores “nursing care 101.”

Extendicar­e said in a statement on its website that it does “not believe this lawsuit has merit,” and it intends “to demonstrat­e this through the court process.

“Extendicar­e has very comprehens­ive programs which ensure that residents of its homes are appropriat­ely cared for,” the statement said.

“We work with our residents and families to address issues and concerns and it is unfortunat­e when they cannot be resolved.”

In a statement emailed to The Canadian Press, Sienna Senior Living said it has received the claim and is “currently reviewing it.”

The lawsuits seek a total of $300 million in damages from the two companies, including $100 million each in “aggravated and punitive damages.”

None of the allegation­s have been proven in court.

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