Tri-County Vanguard

N.S. government vows to act on long-term care report

- JENNIFER HENDERSON SALTWIRE NETWORK

Health Minister Randy Delorey says the government will “pursue and act upon all the recommenda­tions” that came out of an expert panel on longterm care.

He couldn’t explain why the province had waited two years before issuing a tender to collect informatio­n on the matter, nor would he provide any estimate for how much the province is prepared to invest to turn recommenda­tions on paper into real reforms.

Progressiv­e Conservati­ve critic Barbara Adams is concerned the panel’s decision not to recommend specific changes to the staff-to-resident ratio will give the Liberal government an excuse to avoid spending more money.

“As a physiother­apist, I have worked in most of the longterm care facilities in metro and all of these recommenda­tions have been talked about for a decade,” said Adams, MLA for Cole Harbour.

“The problem is you need the funding to do these things. When you can’t say how many workers we need per patient, then the government can say we will add a few more workers and ‘we’re done.’ Without clear numbers, which the panel did not provide, and which was part of their mandate, that’s the biggest frustratio­n among all of the stakeholde­rs.”

“This committee’s report feels to me like long-term care is on fire and they’ve given us a glass of water,” said Nan MacFadgen, a licensed practical nurse and president of the Canadian Union of Public Employees, which represents continuing care assistants in 47 homes.

“We’re desperate. Right now we have entry level continuing care assistants working for $16.38 an hour who haven’t seen a raise since 2013. So who would be attracted to this profession?”

“In my view, the panel is right to say the present ratio of staff to residents is inadequate, it is falling short, we need more,” said NDP leader Gary Burrill. “I disagree that they ought not be recommendi­ng a ratio at this moment. We do have a lot of research about this subject. The best thing to do would be to implement the ratio levels as recommende­d in the Broken Homes report.”

Broken Homes called for an increase in daily hours of care per patient from 3.1 to 4.0. Panel chair Janice Keefe suggested that measure is difficult to impose because of so many difference­s among the 92 licensed homes.

Chrissy Dunnington, 39, was a healthy disabled adult with spina bifida when she entered Parkstone Enhanced Care in 2017. Chrissy died in March 2018 following complicati­ons from a severely infected bedsore the size of a fist. Her sister Elizabeth Deveau says Chrissy’s family is “encouraged” by many of the recommenda­tions from the experts, including those which direct the province to fully implement a recent strategy to prevent pressure injuries, hire more caregivers, and to provide “dedicated space” for disabled younger adults with different needs.

Deveau says she is hopeful the province will act on the panel’s recommenda­tion to overhaul the “antiquated” Homes for Special Act to open the door for further changes. Dunnington’s family would like to see the province require all homes get accreditat­ion, protect “whistleblo­wers,” and tackle issues around how patients get shifted. The Shannex home where Chrissy lived relied on mechanical hoists and the policy there did not permit staff to lift residents.

“You can’t have a ‘no lift’ policy and expect patients not to get bedsores,” said Deveau.

“As a physiother­apist, I have worked in most of the long-term care facilities in metro and all of these recommenda­tions have been talked about for a decade.”

— PC critic Barbara Adams

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