CBC: Sunnybrook
Hospital or Logging of Torture and Murder
For evidence: shatteredcanadianlives@gmail.comProtecting Our Seniors from Abuse of Governmental and Private Institutions
Elder abuse has become Canada one of the most pressing problems facing older people in government and private institutions. With a younger generation of people taking care of their own lives, they rarely find time to spend with their parents who are often physically and psychologically abused in hospitals and nursing homes.
Enhanced home care could better match seniors' needs,
report says
1
in 5 seniors who enter long-term care capable of living at home with better
targeted support
More than 20 per cent of Canadian
seniors who go into residential care might have been able to stay at home with
supports, according to a new report.
There are currently 2.6 million
people in Canada aged 75 or older, about seven per cent of the country's
population. These seniors tend to rely heaviest on health-care services, and
their ranks are expected to more than double over the next 20 years, from 2.6
million to 5.7 million, the Canadian Institute for Health Information says.
The institute released its report, Seniors in Transition:
Exploring Pathways Across the Care Continuum, on Tuesday.
The report's authors found that
after an initial assessment, about one in five (22 per cent) individuals
who enter residential care (also known as long-term care) with
round-the-clock nursing supports resemble their peers in the community and
might have been able to be supported in home care.
After considering seniors who could
have delayed or avoided admission to residential care with community-based
supports, the ratio increased to about one in three or 30 per cent.
"There is significant
opportunity to match care needs and care settings," said Steve
Atkinson, the institute's manager of analytics and special projects in
Victoria.
The intention isn't to fault seniors
as being in the wrong place at the wrong time, Atkinson said. Rather, it's to
illuminate opportunities to ensure the sustainability of health-care systems.
Greater
independence
Typically, seniors who could be
accommodated with home care might need light help with activities such as meal
preparation and transportation. They generally have no cognitive impairments or
early signs.
Seniors often say they prefer to
live in their own home, Atkinson said. Having home care services that match
their needs could allow greater independence.
The report's authors said their
analysis raises questions about what supports and services are needed to allow
individuals to stay in the community longer. The solutions are likely
regional or jurisdictional, Atkinson said, noting there is no uniform standard
for home care and residential services.
"Using existing resources
effectively and efficiently — without compromising care quality, timeliness and
outcomes — is what health organizations across the country are striving
for," the report's authors said.
Atkinson said there could be
"profound savings" by supporting an individual in the community for
two or three months more. For instance, delaying entry by just one month to a
health system with 30,000 residential care beds and an average length of stay
of 20 months would allow the system to serve nearly 1,000 more people.
The authors found various
factors influenced admission to residential care after an initial
assessment:
- The need for extensive physical assistance.
- Moderate cognitive impairment.
- Wandering behaviour.
- Living alone.
- A caregiver who is unable to continue providing assistance.
The authors said there are
innovative approaches being introduced across the country to meet client and
caregiver needs in the home. Atkinson pointed to the potential of new
technologies such as video visits with care providers and clinicians to monitor
the health of people at home.
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