B.C.'s seniors advocate issues residential care report, largest in Canada | iNFOnews | Thompson-Okanagan's News Source
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B.C.'s seniors advocate issues residential care report, largest in Canada

Original Publication Date September 15, 2017 - 1:46 PM

VANCOUVER - Most seniors in British Columbia's residential care facilities feel safe and half of them believe the quality of care is excellent, but almost as many say the homes don't feel like a home, says a report released Friday.

B.C.'s Seniors Advocate Isobel Mackenzie said seniors also complained that a lack of friends and freedoms were some of negatives of life in residential care facilities. More than 60 per cent of the seniors reported not being able to shower or bathe when they wanted, she said.

The landmark report, billed as the largest survey of its kind in Canada, involved interviewing 22,000 people and makes eight recommendations, including immediately increasing staffing levels, adding flexibility around the delivery of services and activities and improving meal time experiences.

"If I had to sum up what the 22,000 voices, the 10,000 residents, 10,000 family members are telling, it is we need more staff," said Mackenzie at a news conference. "We know in B.C. that over 80 per cent of our facilities are not staffed at the recommended level."

Health Minister Adrian Dix said he's been mandated by Premier John Horgan to increase staffing levels to ensure seniors in B.C.'s public and private residential care facilities receive 3.36 hours of individual care daily.

"Certainly, there's a staffing question," he said. "We need to promote opportunities in care for people to live to the fullest extent of their freedom, which is what we all want to do in the course of our lives. At the heart of that is the fact that care homes are currently understaffed based on provincial guidelines."

The former Liberal government in the weeks before last May's election announced a four-year, $500 million care plan to meet the 3.36 hour daily care target. The plan proposed hiring 1,500 more people, including health-care assistants, nurses, occupational therapists and physiotherapists.

Mackenzie said staff shortages are the common thread behind many of the concerns raised by seniors in interviews, including regulated activity, meal, bath, toilet and sleep times.

"We need to give residents more freedom," said Mackenzie. "They don't get to eat when they want. They don't get to get up when they want. They don't get to spontaneously do things when they want. We're going to have to come to terms with how we're going to create an environment that allows flexibility and freedom for those who are still capable of exercising it, and many are."

She said many seniors reported having few friends as a negative reality of life in a residential facility.

The report found almost 46 per cent of residents said there is no one living in the facility they consider a close friend and 45 per cent say there is no one to do things with, Mackenzie said.

She said about 90 per cent of those interviewed feel safe and almost as many feel they are treated with respect, but 60 per cent say they don't get to bathe as often as they'd like.

The report concluded only 57 per cent of residents report that the care facility regularly feels like home.

—By Dirk Meissner in Victoria.

News from © The Canadian Press, 2017
The Canadian Press

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