From the CBC:
“Why some nursing homes won't let
families install 'granny cams' to check on their loved ones”
When Robin Nelson found out she could
no longer visit her mother at her long-term care facility because of COVID-19,
her immediate worry wasn't her mother's susceptibility to the illness. It was
the isolation. Ann Nelson, 79, lives at
Extendicare Lakefield in Lakefield, Ont. She has suffered three strokes and has
care needs that come along with that, including extra feeding time, since she
can't swallow. But Robin Nelson said her mother also needs human contact and
the peace of mind of knowing her daughter is there for her. That's why, Nelson
said, she wanted to install a two-way audio camera in her mother's room, so
that even though she wouldn't be able to help with her care every day, she
could still check in to make sure she was breathing clearly and to let her know
her family was there. But the home wouldn't allow it. "I know how busy they are," Nelson
said. "It's not that I'm concerned about the basic care at this home. But
... my mom's needs are high. She's very fragile. She's at constant risk of
choking. "With a two-way talk granny cam, I'd be able to see my mom 24
hours a day, and I'd be able to talk to her whenever. I need to see her face. I
need to see her one hand, her right hand that moves." Extendicare, one of
Canada's largest providers of long-term care, owns or manages more than 100
homes in at least five provinces. When asked by CBC about Nelson's case, the
company said in an email, "While we try to accommodate the interests of
our residents and families when we can, in this instance, we need to take into
account applicable law and our obligations to and the rights of others." The
concern in some long-term care homes is that if the resident leaves the room,
there is the potential for the camera to record two people who enter the room
without their consent, which, they fear, could violate the law around recording
private conversations. The home told
Nelson the camera she gave them was not allowed because it could record audio.
She offered to disable the audio when she wasn't interacting with her mom, but
the home said they would only be willing to accommodate a video camera that
couldn't record audio. "It has been our position that there are legal
implications surrounding the equipment and capabilities that have prevented the
installation," said Dawn Baldwin, executive director of Extendicare
Lakefield, in an email to Nelson. "I am sorry that we could not come to
the resolution you were looking for around the camera."
'Granny cams' more common: So-called granny cams are increasingly used
by families to keep an eye on their loved ones in long-term care homes. At first, Nelson said, Extendicare Lakefield
seemed amenable to the idea. At the request of the home, Nelson had a
technician install personal Wi-Fi in her mother's room so the camera wouldn't
use the home's Wi-Fi, and Nelson purchased a camera. Everything was set up, and
the administrators had the camera. All that was left to do was plug it in. But
then the home decided not to activate it. Emails between Extendicare and Nelson
indicated that Extendicare would accept an Axis M30 camera in the room. They
described the camera as having no audio recording capabilities, no two-way
communication function and ability to record video to a local memory card
instead of live streaming it. Nelson was not happy with this compromise,
especially since she isn't allowed inside the home during the pandemic to
retrieve the SD cards. "The camera isn't about just monitoring her
care," she said. "The camera is about being able to engage her, talk
to her, coach her, so ... she doesn't feel alone." Baldwin at Extendicare
told CBC in an email that the home "will continue to work respectfully
with Ms. Nelson toward a solution that is acceptable." "We are happy
to continue co-ordinating daily Skype calls over the lunch hour and window
visits for Ms. Nelson and her family, which we know are hugely important for
all our residents and families to keep spirits up." The home also told CBC
it would be willing to accommodate an Amazon Echo, which allows two-way
communication "without audio recording capabilities." But Nelson said
she fears the home will renege on that compromise after she buys one, since the
Echo does technically have capacity to store audio, which seems to go against
the home's policy.
'An absolute necessity': Meanwhile, 300 km away in Ottawa, Diana
Pepin said she can't imagine getting through the pandemic without her granny
camera. She has had one installed in her mother's room at the Peter D. Clark
Long Term Care Centre to keep an eye on her care since 2017. Pepin originally
had the audio switched off but turned it on after an illness put her
86-year-old mother, Viola, in the hospital. Pepin wanted to be able to monitor
her breathing as she recovered. Pepin
spoke to CBC's Marketplace in 2018 about the abuse she discovered when she
reviewed the camera's recordings. "Die, die, you bitch. You've got to die
now," said one of the personal support workers to her mother as she
dressed her. Staff-to-resident abuse in long-term care homes up 148% from 2011 The
outburst led to the worker being fired, along with two other staffers who
witnessed the abuse and did not report it. Pepin has since become something of
an advocate for the use of cameras as a tool to help improve care when
long-term care residents are unable to speak for themselves. "I don't know
how many people I have told to get that camera in the room," she said.
"It's an absolute necessity." Pepin said the camera helps her ensure
staff are following safety protocols in her mother's room and can intervene if
she sees something she thinks might put her mother at risk. But even with the
camera in the room, Pepin shares some of Robin Nelson's worries about her
mother's mental health now that she can't be in the home every day. "I
have no idea what she's hearing or if it's even audible," Pepin said.
"I don't want Mom to feel that she's abandoned."
Legal confusion over audio
recording: While granny cams are
becoming more common, and are permitted in many care homes, the use of audio
recording is often a point of confusion and legal debate. The Advocacy Centre
for the Elderly in Toronto supports the use of the cameras, but its policy,
dating from 2013, states "it is not recommended that 'granny cams' have an
audio function." "It is an offence under the Criminal Code to record
a private conversation without the consent of the party," the policy says.
"The audio component could potentially record a conversation between a
roommate and their visitors or two staff members having a conversation in the
room." The law generally states that you're not allowed to record a
conversation without consent unless you are an active participant in that conversation.
Daniel Nassrallah, an Ottawa lawyer and
advocate, said he disagrees that this law would apply in residents' rooms. In
fact, he advises his clients — including Pepin — to install cameras with audio
functionality in their loved ones' rooms to monitor their care. Yet he said
he's had half a dozen clients in the last year who have received pushback from
homes about the use of cameras. He said he defends the use of cameras for two
reasons. First, he said, the law is specific to recording without consent, so
if the home makes it clear that there is recording in the room, there shouldn't
be a legal issue. He said the camera doesn't have to be hidden, and homes can
put signs up on the door so anyone entering the room is reminded that there is
a camera recording at all times.
'These cameras are legal': Second, he said that even if there was no
sign, staff don't have a reasonable expectation of privacy when they're in a
resident's room. "We install
cameras not necessarily with the approval of [care home] management, but we
hope to obtain their blessing," Nassrallah said. "These cameras are
legal. From the video side of it, as well as the audio side of it." Nassrallah
said his position is supported by a Quebec regulation as well as case law out
of Quebec from 2017 that specifically establishes the resident's room as their
home and their power of attorney's right to install audio/video recording
devices. The union representing long-term care workers in Quebec challenged
that ruling at the federal level, but the Supreme Court of Canada rejected the
appeal, which, Nassrallah said, means it could be accepted as persuasive common
law in Ontario. Extendicare's legal department told CBC the Supreme Court's
rejection shouldn't be read as an endorsement of the Quebec ruling since the
court doesn't give reasons for why it rejects appeals.
Urging 'exception' during
pandemic: The Ontario Personal Support
Workers' Association, which represents 41,000 care workers across the province,
said its members support the right of relatives to install cameras. Miranda
Ferrier, president of OPSWA, said she thinks homes should be especially
accommodating during this time of crisis. "I think there should be an
exception made when there is a COVID-19 outbreak and [families] can't go in and
see their loved one," she said. "If a family wants to put in a
two-way audio where they can actually talk to their loved ones and check in on
them and so forth, what do we care?" She suggested it could even take some
of the workload off PSWs in terms of trying to keep a resident connected with
their family. "We have to think about the well-being of all residents in
these long-term care homes," she said. Robin Nelson has started a
petition, which has more than 700 signatures so far, asking for Ontario's
Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care to explicitly allow the use of two-way
talk cameras in the Long-term Care Homes Act. She said she'll continue to fight
for the use of the camera in her mother's home. "This isn't about a granny
cam, It's about ... the ill effects of isolation and how it's affecting seniors
in a far greater number than COVID-19 right now."
^ I believe that Nursing Homes
across Canada and the United States are not afraid of personal video cameras
because of any privacy issue, but because it will be evidence to the Elder Abuse
and Neglect that can be found in nearly every single Nursing Home. My
Grandmother lived in Assisted Living for a few years where she had her own room
and telephone. When she needed to be moved to the Nursing Home section
downstairs she had to share a room and isn’t allowed to have her own telephone.
I live a few states away and can’t call or e-mail her. I can send mail, but my
Great-Aunt (my Grandmother’s Sister) who lives in a connected Retirement Condo and
visited my Grandmother every night told me she doesn’t believe the Nursing Home
staff give her the mail or if they do it is weeks old. The Nursing Home section
was closed off in March so my Great-Aunt can no longer visit my Grandmother. No
cameras are allowed and even the Facetime 15 minutes a week has been stopped. I
can only imagine what is going on with my Grandmother and hope that she is well.
The State and Federal Governments need to do much more to protect the elderly
and the disabled in these Nursing Homes since the Abuse and Neglect has been
going on for years, but people have only started to think about it during the
pandemic. When my Mother became Disabled and sick she didn’t want to go to a
Nursing Home so I became her full-time Caregiver for 8 years. I wouldn’t want
her to go into a place known to have abused and neglected its residents. I
offered many times over the years to have my Grandmother and my Great-Aunt come
live with me, but they always refuse saying they want to stay in the hometown
and home-state they have lived in for decades. I would like to see monthly
reports on Nursing Homes around the country made public and more inspections
and punishments for any abuse and neglect found. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/covid-19-long-term-care-granny-cams-1.5553092
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