Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ontario To Test Giving Seniors Retirement Home Stays To Ease Hospital Overcrowding

The Canadian Press, 03 May, 2017 12:09 PM
  • Ontario To Test Giving Seniors Retirement Home Stays To Ease Hospital Overcrowding
TORONTO — Offering recuperating seniors free stays in retirement homes is one of the measures the Ontario government will be testing as it tries to tackle the issue of overcrowded hospitals.
 
The province announced in its budget last week that it would test a program that gives seniors vouchers for their stays in retirement homes in an effort to free up hospital beds, but it has not specified how long the stays will be or which communities the measure will be tested in.
 
Health Minister Eric Hoskins said the program aims to help so-called alternative-level-of-care patients, who are well enough to leave a hospital but don't do so because they're not able to live independently and don't yet have a spot in a long-term care home or a home-care arrangement.
 
Such patients, many who are seniors, are an enormous expense to the health-care system and being stuck in a hospital isn't good for their physical or mental health, Hoskins said.
 
"There are very few patients in ALC beds that love being there, or want to be there," he said on Monday. "So the way I look at it is, the savings we accrue, we can afford to invest out of hospital, often at a fraction of the price and a better patient experience."
 
The government has been facing mounting calls to act on overcrowded hospitals, where patients have ended up in hallways, boardrooms and even cafeterias when regular beds fill up.
 
In the budget, the government announced $24 million for "innovative" ways of dealing with patients in alternative-level-of-care hospital beds.
 
Those funds will go towards what the government calls "demonstration projects," one of which will be the voucher program, the health ministry said. The government will test the program, which is expected to be running this year, and use the results to inform future policies.
 
 
The voucher would cover the cost of recuperating in a private-pay retirement home until a senior is ready to move back home or into government-funded long-term care. Hoskins said the stays provided through the vouchers would be transitional.
 
A similar program has been running in the Hamilton Niagara Haldimand Brant Local Health Integration Network since October 2014, giving seniors temporary stays in retirement homes at a fraction of the cost of keeping them in hospital beds, according to the LHIN.
 
Alternative-level-of-care patients make up about 15 per cent of patients in Ontario hospitals, according to the government. And in over-capacity hospitals, they take up beds that are needed by patients with acute medical problems.
 
Ontario Retirement Communities Association CEO Laurie Johnston said her organization, which represents most of the province's retirement homes, has been in talks with the government about using the voucher program.
 
She said retirement homes have long worked with the province's home and community care organizations in getting government-funded respite and support services to their residents.
 
"This is really just an extension of the program to a segment of the population who perhaps would have had difficulty affording private-pay retirement living while they recuperate," Johnston said. "This would make an opportunity for them to recuperate and build their strength as they move on to their next step."
 
Linda Haslam-Stroud, president of the Ontario Nurses' Association, said she's also spoken with senior civil servants about the use of the voucher program and she's hopeful they'll be successful in moving alternative-level-of-care patients out of hospital more quickly, freeing up beds for other patients.
 
 
It's needed, she said, as all year round nurses have to care for patients who are left in hallways as they wait for a bed in a hospital room.
 
The 2017 budget includes an increase of $518 million in hospital funding, a three-per-cent boost, which came after five years of funding restraint and warnings from hospitals that their funding hasn't allowed them to keep up with the increasing demand for care.
 
The budget also promises an extra $9 billion for hospital construction projects over 10 years, and announced newly approved hospital construction projects in Niagara, Windsor, Hamilton, Mississauga and the Weeneebayko hospital replacement project in northern Ontario, as well as a new $2.5 million for the planning of an expansion to the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health in Toronto.

MORE National ARTICLES

Opposition Mps Seize On Aga Khan Vacation Again To Attack Trudeau, Liberals

OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's controversial New Year's family vacation at the Aga Khan's private island in the Bahamas has opposition MPs riled up once again.

Opposition Mps Seize On Aga Khan Vacation Again To Attack Trudeau, Liberals

Special Code Unlocks Secret On The Bank Of Canada's New $10 Bill Website

Special Code Unlocks Secret On The Bank Of Canada's New $10 Bill Website
If visitors to the website enter the right series of keys, it plays the national anthem and fills the screen with a shower of tiny animated banknotes.

Special Code Unlocks Secret On The Bank Of Canada's New $10 Bill Website

Winnipeg Police Certain Woman Is Dead After Searching Accused's Home

Winnipeg police say they have no idea where the body of a missing woman is, but say they knew she was dead when they searched the home of a man accused of murdering her.

Winnipeg Police Certain Woman Is Dead After Searching Accused's Home

Bank Gives Newfoundland Town Property Where Five-year-old Girl Found Dead

Bank Gives Newfoundland Town Property Where Five-year-old Girl Found Dead
A Toronto-based bank has given a small Newfoundland town the property where the body of a five-year-old girl was found after she was allegedly murdered while visiting her father.

Bank Gives Newfoundland Town Property Where Five-year-old Girl Found Dead

B.C. Man Says No Tracks Beyond Mountain Edge Meant 5 Hikers Had Fallen To Deaths

B.C. Man Says No Tracks Beyond Mountain Edge Meant 5 Hikers Had Fallen To Deaths
A hiker says he was shocked to realize he was standing near a ledge where five people had just fallen to their deaths in the mountains north of Vancouver.

B.C. Man Says No Tracks Beyond Mountain Edge Meant 5 Hikers Had Fallen To Deaths

Public Safety Partnerships in Action

Public Safety Partnerships in Action
At the Public Safety Event at Guildford Town Centre Mall on April 8, the City of Surrey announced a partnership with bc211 to improve access to information for our most vulnerable residents. 

Public Safety Partnerships in Action