From the CBC:
“Last summer, Ford promised
air conditioning in long-term care home rooms. That hasn't happened”
(Ontario Premier Doug Ford
promised last July to quickly make changes to the Long-Term Care Act to ensure
air conditioning is offered in residents' rooms.)
During a heat wave in July 2020,
Ontario Premier Doug Ford promised to "rapidly" mandate air conditioning
in all long-term care homes, including residents' rooms. Nearly a year later,
the province still hasn't done that. Ford
told reporters on July 8 that his government would act "immediately"
to change the Long-Term Care Homes Act. The legislation requires homes without
central air to provide at least one cooling area for every 40 residents and
mandates a minimum temperature of 22 C, but no maximum temperature. Ford
himself pointed to the gaps in those requirements listed in Ontario's Long-Term
Care Homes Act. "Right now in the bill it says common
areas are air conditioned, but just imagine someone sitting up in a third
storey room," he said at a news conference last July. "Sometimes
[staff] don't have an opportunity to bring these patients, especially now, into
these common areas. I can't imagine sitting there in 27 or 28 degrees of heat
in a room, and it's just unacceptable." The Ministry of Long-Term Care
told CBC News that it had "collected information on mechanical cooling
systems in all homes" in February. "We are using this information to
work with the sector to ensure that adequate cooling systems are in place for
this summer to improve the health and well-being of residents,"
spokesperson Mark Nesbitt said in a statement Tuesday.
Lack of mandate 'makes no
sense,' doctor says Palliative care Dr. Amit Arya said it "makes no
sense" that the province hasn't mandated system-wide change, especially
following scathing reports from the military and long-term care commission
about the deplorable conditions in homes and dehydration and neglect of
residents. The military provided medical
and humanitarian aid at seven homes in Ontario as the system was overwhelmed by
COVID-19 cases last spring. "Renovations, whether it comes to fixing
overcrowding or making sure that we have air conditioning, should have already
been well underway and ready for the summer," Arya said. Ontario
investigating 2 long-term care homes following allegations residents died of
neglect during pandemic "I mean, it's not a surprise that we have warm
weather at this time, so I don't understand why this hasn't been done." Ford's announcement last year followed reports
of residents confined to their sweltering rooms during pandemic-related
lockdowns and their families and advocates demanding urgent change.
Families remain frustrated
(Nick Puopolo's mother has lived
at Woodbridge Vista Care Community for five years.)
Nick Puopolo was among those
calling for action. While visiting his 85-year-old mother at Woodbridge Vista
Care Community, he measured the temperature in her room and found it was 27 C. Following
Ford's announcement last July, Puopolo was hopeful that next summer would be
different. Now he's even more frustrated. Ford "presents himself that he really
cares and he's going to get it fixed," he said. "And it's all just
words. There are no actions to the words." Residents' families pushed hard for Sienna
Senior Living to install air conditioning throughout the Woodbridge Vista
facility, not just in common areas, said Puopolo. Even
now, he said, hundreds of fully vaccinated residents remain confined to their
hot rooms as the home continues to grapple with COVID-19 outbreaks. Sienna
Senior Living, which is a for-profit company, sent out an email to residents'
families this May saying that they were in the process of installing air
conditioning throughout the home. Puopolo said he was told by the home that
installation of central air should be complete by the end of June. It's a small
win for Woodbridge Vista, but Puopolo wonders if it would've happened at all
without relentless activism on the part of families. That's why he says the
province needs to make air conditioning mandatory across all homes. "We
keep pushing the executives, we keep getting the media involved to put pressure
on them and they're doing it," Puopolos said.
Homes now have cooling in
common areas Ontario provided funding for air conditioning in long-term
care homes and they are all now up to code with cooling spaces in common areas,
according to Donna Duncan, CEO of the Ontario Long Term Care Association, which
represents 70 per cent of private, not-for-profit, charitable and municipal
care homes in Ontario. Homes are
working toward installing air conditioning in residents' rooms, but she said
it's not practical for some older facilities. "Regardless of
ownership everyone is stepping up and doing what they can ... to find solutions
on a home-by-home basis," Duncan said. "Overall we are very pleased
with the progress that's been made over the past year." Ontario's
largest for-profit long-term care operators, Extendicare, Chartwell Retirement
Residences and Revera did not answer questions about which of their homes have
air conditioning in residents' rooms. Duncan said she was unsure what
percentage of homes have air conditioning throughout their facilities. Sienna
Senior Living said it meets Ontario's cooling requirements by providing air
conditioning in common areas and has surveyed resident rooms. "We are actively pursuing both long
and short-term solutions to ensure mechanical cooling requirements are in place
to not only meet but, where possible, exceed minimum requirements," said
spokesperson Nadia Daniell-Colarossi.
^ It seems that in Canada (like
the US) the elderly and disabled in long-term homes are deemed “expendable”
whether it’s during a Pandemic or a Heat Wave. The Officials that refuse to help
the elderly and the disabled seem to forget that they will one day be elderly
(and possibly disabled) and would be the treated in the same inhumane way as
they are currently treating the elderly and the disabled. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/air-conditioning-long-term-care-1.6039532
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