Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

Elderly Surrey Couple Living In Separate Care Homes To Be Reunited Soon

The Canadian Press, 30 Aug, 2016 12:50 PM
    VANCOUVER — The family of an elderly husband and wife in British Columbia who were forced to live in separate care homes say the health authority overseeing the couples' care is moving forward with plans to reunite them.
     
    Ashley Bartyik says her family met with Fraser Health and has decided to move her 83-year-old grandfather into a facility in Surrey, B.C., that's closer to his wife of 62 years.
     
    Her grandfather, Wolfram Gottschalk, has dementia and lymphoma and is on a wait list to be transferred into the facility where Anita lives, but they currently live about a half-hour drive apart and cry whenever they see each other.
     
    Bartyik captured their emotions in a photo last week and posted the picture online, where it has been shared thousands of times and made headlines around the world.
     
    The family spoke with representatives from Fraser Health on Monday and Bartyik says they were given a number of options, including moving Wolfram to a facility just blocks from Anita while he waits for a spot to open up in the care home where she lives.
     
    Bartyik says the move is "a huge step in the right direction" because it will allow Wolfram to get the care he needs while he waits, and that it will make the situation easier for the entire family.
     
    "We are that much closer to having them under one roof! Progress!" she says in an email to The Canadian Press.
     
    Fraser Health spokeswoman Tasleem Juma says in a statement that reunification is a priority for the health authority, but there is always room for improvement.
     
    When the photo of her grandparents made waves online, Bartyik said she hoped it would draw attention to the shortage of publicly funded beds for seniors in B.C.
     
    Now she says the family is happy to hear that Fraser Health is working to help other families who are in similar situations.
     
    Juma says the health authority has had a lot of success in bringing people back together.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Saskatchewan Councillor Resigns After Comment About Killing Of Aboriginal Man

    Saskatchewan Councillor Resigns After Comment About Killing Of Aboriginal Man
    The rural municipality of Browning, southeast of Regina, says in a news release that it has accepted the resignation of Lampman farmer Ben Kautz.

    Saskatchewan Councillor Resigns After Comment About Killing Of Aboriginal Man

    Special Forces Commander Charged After Accidentially Firing Weapon

    Special Forces Commander Charged After Accidentially Firing Weapon
      The charge against Maj.-Gen. Michael Rouleau, commander of Canadian Special Forces Operations, stems from an incident in northern Iraq last December.

    Special Forces Commander Charged After Accidentially Firing Weapon

    Dairy Farmers Protest Outside Hotel Where Trudeau Meets With Liberal Caucus

    Dairy Farmers Protest Outside Hotel Where Trudeau Meets With Liberal Caucus
    SAGUENAY, Que. — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau arrived Thursday in Saguenay, Que., to hunker down with his Liberal caucus and hammer out the government's agenda before returning to Parliament Hill next month.

    Dairy Farmers Protest Outside Hotel Where Trudeau Meets With Liberal Caucus

    Government Calls On Both Sides In Canada Post Dispute To Work With Mediator

    Government Calls On Both Sides In Canada Post Dispute To Work With Mediator
    OTTAWA — An 11th-hour effort was underway Thursday to avert a work stoppage at Canada Post, even as both sides in the labour dispute dug in their heels, declaring an apparent impasse.

    Government Calls On Both Sides In Canada Post Dispute To Work With Mediator

    Goodale Says There Is No Tolerance For 'Inappropriate Use Of Force' In Prison

    Goodale Says There Is No Tolerance For 'Inappropriate Use Of Force' In Prison
    OTTAWA — Federal Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale says there should be no tolerance for the inappropriate use of force by corrections officials.

    Goodale Says There Is No Tolerance For 'Inappropriate Use Of Force' In Prison

    Concerns Over Nova Scotia Nursing Home Food Should Lie With Facility: Premier

    HALIFAX — Nova Scotia's premier is defending his government's record on funding for nursing home food, saying a large Halifax care facility that's been criticized for bland food has a significant budget surplus.

    Concerns Over Nova Scotia Nursing Home Food Should Lie With Facility: Premier