Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Health authority takes over care home hit by COVID

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Oct, 2021 10:08 AM
  • Health authority takes over care home hit by COVID

VANCOUVER - The Vancouver Coastal Health Authority is taking over operations of a Vancouver care home where dozens of residents died during a COVID-19 outbreak that began last November and took months to contain.

A statement from the health authority says the Ministry of Health has approved the transfer of operations and assets from Little Mountain Residential Care and Housing Society.

The transfer includes Little Mountain Place, a 116-bed long-term care home for seniors, where 41 deaths and many more COVID-19 illnesses were reported last winter.

The statement says the transition, which also includes a 96-unit independent living facility and a 73-bed long-term care home for younger adults with complex needs, is expected to be completed in the next few months.

Society president Bob Breen says the pandemic accentuated some ongoing problems including inadequate access to finance, human resources and general administrative supports, as well as a limited ability to attract and maintain staff.

Bob Chapman, interim vice-president of the health authority, says it has worked with the society to support management of the three facilities, but is now in the process of gathering necessary approvals and consulting with stakeholders in advance of the takeover.

“The transfer of these facilities to VCH will provide long-term stability for staff and help ensure safe, quality care for residents," Chapman says in the statement.

A health authority inspection of Little Mountain Place in early January found staffing levels were low and cleaning was inadequate, as the virus spread throughout the long-term care home following the outbreak that was declared on Nov. 22.

Ninety-nine of 114 residents living at Little Mountain Place ultimately tested positive for the illness. Figures from the B.C. Centre for Disease Control show 72 staff also became ill, but none died.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

3 Vancouver police officers charged

3 Vancouver police officers charged
The officers allegedly tried to stop a man for riding a bike with no helmet, lights or suitable reflectors near a SkyTrain station in May 2017, when he was injured.

3 Vancouver police officers charged

Federal deficit hit $48.5 billion in July

Federal deficit hit $48.5 billion in July
The Finance Department's regular fiscal monitor says the budgetary deficit between April and July was just under $48.5 billion, down from the almost $148.6 billion recorded over the same months in 2020 when COVID-19 first struck.    

Federal deficit hit $48.5 billion in July

Huawei CFO to make surprise court appearance in NY

Huawei CFO to make surprise court appearance in NY
Meng, the tech giant's chief financial officer and daughter of the company's founder, has been under house arrest in Vancouver as she awaits possible extradition to the United States.

Huawei CFO to make surprise court appearance in NY

B.C. has 'depleted' naloxone kit supply: premier

B.C. has 'depleted' naloxone kit supply: premier
Premier John Horgan says his government is working to allocate funding to buy more naloxone kits, which have successfully been used to reverse opioid overdoses in thousands of people in the province.

B.C. has 'depleted' naloxone kit supply: premier

Twitter requires Maxime Bernier to delete tweet

Twitter requires Maxime Bernier to delete tweet
The journalists from CTV News, Global News and the Hill Times had asked about the People's Party's endorsement by white nationalist groups, fears among racialized Canadians about what the party represents and whether it tolerates potential acts of hate by supporters on the campaign trail.

Twitter requires Maxime Bernier to delete tweet

B.C. wildfire causes $77 million insured damages

B.C. wildfire causes $77 million insured damages
The cost estimate from the Insurance Bureau of Canada says the so-called White Rock Lake fire destroyed 78 properties in the Central Okanagan. The bureau says the fire was one of the most destructive blazes in the province this year and they are expecting more than 800 claims related to the disaster.

B.C. wildfire causes $77 million insured damages