Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Study compares LTC deaths in B.C. to Ontario

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Sep, 2020 09:31 PM
  • Study compares LTC deaths in B.C. to Ontario

A new study says quicker, more decisive action against COVID-19 in British Columbia is one of the reasons the province has suffered far fewer long-term care deaths than Ontario.

Analysis published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal also points to less funding, more privatization and less co-ordination between homes and hospitals as factors that drove spread of the novel coronavirus among Ontario's most vulnerable.

One of the paper's authors, Dr. Irfan Dhalla of St. Michael's Hospital and the University of Toronto, says there's already been a worrying rise in infections as parts of Ontario grapple with a second wave.

And despite lessons learned from the first wave of the pandemic, Dhalla says front-line workers say the province is still not adequately prepared for a new influx of long-term care cases.

"Long-term care has been somewhat neglected and somewhat underfunded across the country," Dhalla said Wednesday, nevertheless commending B.C. for acting decisively to limit cases and deaths.

"All of these factors mean that when the pandemic hit, the chances of a better outcome — or a less worse outcome — in British Columbia, were more favorable."

As of Sept. 10, Ontario reported 1,817 resident deaths from COVID-19, compared to 156 deaths in B.C. The number of cases among LTC residents in Ontario totaled nearly 6,000 compared to 466 in B.C.

The study was published Wednesday in the Canadian Medical Association Journal.

This week, Ontario Premier Doug Ford pledged more measures to rein in COVID-19 at long-term care homes, including restrictions to visitors in provincial hot-spots starting Monday.

Ford also announced $540 million to help long-term care homes support staff, pay for renovations and bolster infection control.

But the Ontario Long Term Care Association, which represents home operators, has said homes are reeling from a staffing crisis and need more support.

Dhalla says B.C.'s system entered the pandemic with several advantages, including better co-ordination between long-term care, public health and hospitals, more money for long-term care, fewer shared rooms and more comprehensive inspections.

He also credited B.C. provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry with quicker action to address staffing and infection prevention and control, as well as harness public support with clear, consistent messages.

"Bonnie Henry has received worldwide acclaim for her leadership, the compassion that she demonstrates from the podium, her willingness to act decisively," says Dhalla.

In particular, he says B.C. announced in March that long-term care staff could only work in a single home, about three weeks earlier than Ontario.

Dhalla says Ontario was also a month behind B.C. in comprehensive efforts to send out infection control teams.

The paper noted other differences:

-before the pandemic, 63 per cent of Ontario residents shared a room compared to 24 per cent in British Columbia;

-in 2018–2019, the average combined funding per resident per diem was $222 in British Columbia compared to $203 in Ontario;

-58 per cent of LTC homes in Ontario are for-profit compared to 34 per cent in British Columbia;

-and some estimates suggest B.C. residents received 3.25 daily hours of direct care before the pandemic versus 2.71 daily hours in Ontario.

Dhalla acknowledges some Ontario regions and facilities did better than others because of quicker COVID response, "but that didn't happen across the province."

Dhalla also notes that the pandemic hit just as Ontario's health system was in a state of flux.

At the time, regional health networks and several provincial agencies were merged into a single agency called Ontario Health, says the paper.

That saw the departure of several senior leaders who have yet to be replaced, and came amid budget cuts for Public Health Ontario and individual public health units.

MORE National ARTICLES

Calgary Zoo hopes pandas will be China-bound soon

Calgary Zoo hopes pandas will be China-bound soon
The zoo says international permit approvals are now underway and it's cautiously optimistic it will be able to confirm a flight to China for the pandas soon.

Calgary Zoo hopes pandas will be China-bound soon

Feds pledge $440M for global vaccine program

Feds pledge $440M for global vaccine program
The federal government has committed more than $1 billion to buying vaccines for Canada, much of which is not refundable even if the vaccines are never approved.

Feds pledge $440M for global vaccine program

Federal deficit hits $148.6B through July

Federal deficit hits $148.6B through July
The result compared with a deficit of $1.6 billion for the same period in the 2019-2020 fiscal year.

Federal deficit hits $148.6B through July

PM 'disappointed' by RCMP mask policy

PM 'disappointed' by RCMP mask policy
The World Sikh Organization of Canada says officers have been placed on desk duty for almost six months, as the RCMP found the N100 mask does not seal with facial hair.

PM 'disappointed' by RCMP mask policy

Forces nears end to long search for rescue planes

Forces nears end to long search for rescue planes
The unveiling at Canadian Forces Base Comox, B.C., follows more than 15 years of controversy and start-stop effort to buy replacements for the ancient Buffalo and older-model Hercules aircraft used by the military to save Canadians every year.

Forces nears end to long search for rescue planes

Mistrial declared in N.L. cop's sex assault trial

Mistrial declared in N.L. cop's sex assault trial
Const. Carl Douglas Snelgrove of the Royal Newfoundland Constabulary was facing his second trial for allegedly sexually assaulting a woman he had driven home in his police vehicle in 2014.

Mistrial declared in N.L. cop's sex assault trial