From the CBC:
“Senior
presumed to have COVID-19 left soiled in bed for days after home care visits
cancelled”
(Cristina David
says she was left alone for days to care for her husband, Simon, who is
bedridden, after she tested positive for COVID-19. She says the agencies that
provide the support stopped sending workers after she alerted them of her
diagnosis.)
A Mississauga,
Ont., senior who relies on provincially funded home care was left soiled in his
bed for days after he and his wife became ill with COVID-19 nearly two weeks
ago and care workers stopped showing up. Simon David, 74, a former mechanical
engineer, suffers from late-stage dementia and the effects of a stroke that
left him bedridden and unable to feed himself. It takes two trained health-care
professionals to secure Simon in a lift so he can use the washroom and be
cleaned. For six days, starting on Dec. 31, his publicly funded pair of
personal care workers didn't visit. Instead, his wife, Cristina David, who was
feeling sick, had to try to care for Simon herself. "It's inhumane....
This shouldn't be happening," she said. "This was our greatest time
of need." On New Year's Eve, the day Cristina tested positive for
COVID-19, her husband started to show symptoms as well. Health authorities told
her that Simon was presumed to be infected, too. Cristina said she immediately
alerted the two agencies that provide care for her husband, the Mississauga
Halton Community Access Care Centre (CCAC) and the Victorian Order of Nurses
(VON). That afternoon, she said, the two agencies held a conference call with
her and advised that her husband's home care would be stopped. "They
told me immediately that they will cancel the services when I disclosed that I
was infected," she told CBC News. Cristina
said she's filed a formal complaint with the local health integration network
and her representative at Queen's Park over the agencies' handling of the
situation.
Agencies
face challenges providing care during pandemic Both agencies told CBC News
they can't comment on the couple's situation directly due to privacy
regulations. CCAC is a publicly funded agency that contracts nursing and
personal support work to VON. In an emailed statement to CBC News, VON
spokesperson Rosie Michel said staff are well trained in the use of personal
protective equipment, but that sometimes staffing issues arise. "There are
sometimes circumstances in which either clients and their families/caregivers,
or VON, or both, conclude that care cannot continue to be provided by the VON
care team," Michel said. "Generally speaking, if a member of a
client's main VON care team isn't available for any reason, VON works with
clients and families/caregivers to ensure a contingency plan is in place and
that care can continue to be delivered."
Trying to
make it work Last April, Cristina moved her husband out of a long-term care
home because she was so concerned about the quality of care and the spread of
COVID-19. Prior to Dec. 31, two
personal support workers from VON would arrive at the Davids' home twice a day.
In addition to securing Simon in the lift so he could go to the washroom and be
cleaned, they would also help feed him and give him his medications. Cristina
said when VON workers stopped showing up, she was too weak from COVID-19 to
take care of her husband. Simon was left in bed, soiled, for three days,
she said. Cristina said a VON case worker told her to take Simon to
hospital if he became very sick, but he never did. After three days
without care workers, Cristina said she called her stepdaughter, Donnie David,
for help to lift, clean and feed Simon. "All I had were gloves and a mask.
Feeding and changing him is a lot of close contact," Donnie told CBC News.
Days later, the 26-year-old started feeling unwell. On Friday, Peel health
officials told her she tested positive for COVID-19. "They just assumed
that since this was a house with an outbreak, that's where I got it from,"
Donnie said. Cristina said she feels terrible about her stepdaughter's illness.
"This should not have
happened," she said On Jan. 5, a lone care worker showed up and was unable
to lift Simon out of the bed, Cristina said. Since then, care has been
sporadic, she said, often with a single worker visiting the home. She said she's been told full care for her
husband will resume on Jan. 14, two weeks after the COVID-19 diagnosis.
Not a
patient's responsibility to ensure care is coming Alison Thompson, an
associate professor at the University of Toronto specializing in ethical issues
in health care, said the provincially funded Mississauga Halton CCAC and VON
appear to have failed a family in crisis. "The obligation is on the
part of the home care provider to make sure the patients are being cared
for," said Thompson. "It's not the responsibility of the
people who are very, very ill at the time to be filling the holes in their
care. It's too much to ask, and it's really a failure on the part of the
provider to meet the needs, and [they] are contractually obligated to do
that." Mississauga Halton CCAC spokesperson Laura Zilke said the
agency has reached out to other health-care suppliers to help meet the needs of
clients during the pandemic. "Care providers continue to provide
essential nursing, therapies and personal support services to individuals who
require these home care services to remain in their home, regardless of whether
the client is [COVID-19] positive or negative," she said in an emailed
statement. Donnie said it's been heartbreaking watching her stepmother
struggle to provide care. "I honestly feel like they abandoned [my
parents]," she said.
^ Every single
person from both of these agencies failed Simon and Cristina David and should
be held accountable. Even during a Pandemic there is no excuse for their kind
of behavior. I would rather see the people who were supposed to have helped
them lose their jobs and their licenses then be allowed to continue “helping”
other patients since a patient and their family needs to know they will receive
the care they deserve and require no matter what. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/covid-home-care-seniors-1.5870541
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