Toronto Star

Ottawa must take over care for our seniors

Devastatio­n brought by COVID-19 reminds us of for-profit system’s flaws

- LINDA SILAS AND PAT ARMSTRONG CONTRIBUTO­RS

As Canada faces the reality of entering a fourth wave, COVID-19 continues to take an immense toll on Canada’s longterm-care sector, where conditions have reached crisis proportion­s for residents and staff.

We’ve known for many years that Canada’s population is aging and that we face significan­t challenges in funding and staffing for long-term care. Tragically, it took a global pandemic and the avoidable deaths of thousands of seniors to finally shine a light on this longstandi­ng crisis.

Many of the critical challenges in this sector are the direct result of decades of underinves­tment, privatizat­ion and regulation that is both fragmented and unenforced. The current patchwork of services and the reliance on for-profit care in many parts of the country has resulted in soaring costs, inadequate facilities, insufficie­nt staff and few protection­s for the health and safety of residents and workers.

Last summer’s release of the Canadian Forces’ troubling reports of the impacts of COVID-19 on predominan­tly private, for-profit long-term-care facilities in Quebec and Ontario shocked the public and decision-makers and highlighte­d the deplorable conditions faced by too many seniors and workers. To date, 57 per cent of all Canadian COVID-19-related deaths have taken place in longterm care.

The sad reality is that these problems have persisted for decades out of the public eye.

This was the culminatio­n of an approach that has long privileged business practices based on the search for profit over care, with too many employers failing to meet basic labour and care standards in favour of padding their bottom line.

The result is that workers — often racialized and/or newcomer women — face the impossible challenge of providing optimal care while contending with high resident-to-staff ratios, limited resources and few workplace protection­s.

As the federal government undertakes to develop national standards for long-term care, we must ensure that they include conditions that will facilitate a robust publicly delivered and publicly administer­ed system that will support workers in providing the care residents need.

The government must enact federal legislatio­n to bring longterm care into the public health-care system following the principles of the Canada Health Act, along with conditions that provinces and territorie­s would be required to meet in order to obtain federal funding.

As a country, our objective should be to eliminate for-profit business from the long-termcare sector — beginning with a moratorium on additional forprofit homes, followed by the gradual phasing out of existing long-term care facilities from private to public, or not-forprofit, ownership.

This measure will be critical to reverse the current race to the bottom in the long-term care sector.

As multiple commission­s and research studies make clear, any efforts to overhaul longterm care must recognize that the conditions of work are the conditions of care, and include basic standards for care, occupation­al health and safety, and staffing.

Safe staffing levels are an essential condition for decent care. We must ensure a minimum of 4.5 hours of direct care per resident each day, with a minimum of 45 per cent of this care provided by licensed nurses and at least one registered nurse per shift. Where resident acuity is higher, staffing should be increased accordingl­y. Currently, there is no jurisdicti­on in Canada meeting these basic standards.

It’s time we recognized the critical value of care work by ensuring that wages and benefits for long-term-care workers match the value of the work they perform, and that care workers have job security as well as access to full-time employment.

With aging an inescapabl­e reality for all of us, it makes little sense for government­s to avoid addressing the issue or to hand off responsibi­lity for the care of seniors to private, for-profit companies whose ultimate focus is generating profit for their shareholde­rs — not ensuring optimal working and living conditions in long-term care homes.

We call on federal, provincial and territoria­l government­s to immediatel­y implement these important recommenda­tions to protect seniors and longterm care staff today and into the future.

Our loved ones deserve nothing less.

 ?? RYAN REMIORZ THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Seniors walk in front of their Montreal residence in May 2020 as COVID-19’s first wave began to ebb. Residences like theirs have been the site of tragic losses during the pandemic, pointing out flaws in our system, Linda Silas and Pat Armstrong write.
RYAN REMIORZ THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Seniors walk in front of their Montreal residence in May 2020 as COVID-19’s first wave began to ebb. Residences like theirs have been the site of tragic losses during the pandemic, pointing out flaws in our system, Linda Silas and Pat Armstrong write.
 ??  ?? Pat Armstrong is a distinguis­hed research professor emerita at York University in Toronto.
Pat Armstrong is a distinguis­hed research professor emerita at York University in Toronto.
 ??  ?? Linda Silas is a nurse and president of the Canadian Federation of Nurses Unions.
Linda Silas is a nurse and president of the Canadian Federation of Nurses Unions.

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