Toronto Star

Pandemic exposed long-term care’s issues, report says

Nine recommenda­tions listed in study aim to fix industry’s workforce crisis

- MORGAN LOWRIE

MONTREAL— Canada has failed in its duty to protect vulnerable elders in long-term care, according to a highly critical report that examines the issue in light of the COVID-19 crisis.

The report released Friday by the Royal Society of Canada found the pandemic was a “shock wave” that exposed many long-standing deficienci­es in the system and caused high levels of “physical, mental and emotional suffering” for seniors.

“Those lives lost unnecessar­ily had value,” reads the report by a working group that was chaired by Dr. Carole Estabrooks at the University of Alberta.

“Those older adults deserved a good closing phase of their lives and a good death. We failed them.”

The working group, which was created by the Royal Society’s COVID-19 task force of scientists and researcher­s, said the causes of the failure are complex but are rooted in what they called “systemic and deeply institutio­nalized implicit attitudes about age and gender.”

It found that 81 per cent of Canada’s COVID-19 deaths have come in long-term-care homes, far higher than what is reported in comparable countries, including a 31 per cent figure in the United States, 28 per cent in Australia and 66 per cent in Spain.

The authors say Canadian homes have allowed staff-topatient ratios to drop and have increasing­ly shifted to an unregulate­d workforce in recent years, even as patients are living longer with diseases that require increasing­ly complex care, such as dementia.

The report notes that authoritie­s have failed to listen to the voices of long-term-care residents and those who care for them — both groups overwhelmi­ngly composed of women. Women are also more likely to be the unpaid caregivers who are increasing­ly called upon to fill the gaps in the system, the authors said.

Long-term-care homes were uniquely vulnerable to COVID-19, combining an alreadysic­k patient base with a disease to which nobody has immunity, the report says. Homes in Canada are often older and feature shared bedrooms and bathrooms, which made containing COVID-19 a challenge.

However, the report also notes that basic infection controls and personal protective equipment were often lacking and that many employees worked in multiple facilities, increasing the chances of spreading the virus.

“We have a duty to care and to fix this — not just to fix the current communicab­le disease crisis, but to fix the sector that enabled that crisis to wreak such avoidable and tragic havoc,” the authors wrote.

The report makes nine recommenda­tions, which it says are geared toward addressing a workforce crisis that leaves homes understaff­ed and employees underpaid and overwhelme­d.

The authors called on Ottawa to develop federal national standards for staffing and training, and to make provincial funding contingent upon meeting them. The federal government should also ensure data is collected on resident quality of life, care standards and worker satisfacti­on and ensure it is analyzed by a third-party body, the report says. That data should also take into account disparitie­s caused by race, ethnicity, gender identity, poverty and other vulnerabil­ities.

Provinces must “immediatel­y implement appropriat­e pay and benefits, including sick leave, for the large and critical unregulate­d workforce of direct-care aides and personal support workers” and offer them ongoing training and mental health support, the report’s authors said.

Unregulate­d staff should be offered full-time work, and provinces should evaluate “one workplace” policies that prevent employees from moving from site to site, the report concludes.

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