
P.E.I. government board says 3 long-term care homes still not meeting standards
CBC
In its most recent licensing decision, the P.E.I. Community Care Facilities and Nursing Homes Board has ruled that three privately run long-term care homes — Garden Home, South Shore Villa and Clinton View Lodge — are still not meeting the provincial inspection standards for full licences.
The three homes have been operating with provisional licenses, and that status will continue until at least the end of the month, according to rulings posted online Thursday night.
As well, an admission freeze at Clinton View Lodge has been left in effect, meaning the facility cannot take in any new residents.
Nobody from the P.E.I. Department of Health and Wellness or the homes involved was available for comment Friday.
Whisperwood Villa is also operating under a provisional licence, with a review pending by the end of the month.
Pat Armstrong is a long-term care researcher from York University in Ontario. She said if for-profit care homes across the country can't reach the appropriate standards of care, the provincial government involved should consider taking control of the facilities.
"One of the problems is when you contract out these services and they fail to do what you tell them to do, then it's very, very hard to close them down, because what are you going to do with the people that are in them?" said Armstrong.
"So we need to start making sure from the beginning that the quality of their care is there. This is about people's lives."
The licensing letters sent to the P.E.I. long-term care homes also call for updated wound care policies, staff education and evidence that gaps in service regarding wound care have been addressed.
That's something Armstrong said can be a matter of life and death.
"Wound care sounds like it's kind of minor, but it isn't. It can wreck your life and kill you in the end if it isn't handled appropriately," she said.
"So I think we really have to get serious about saying old people count."
Dr. Samir Sinha is the director of geriatrics at Sinai Health and University Network in Toronto. He is also the chair of the Health Standards Organization (HSO) technical committee that developed new national long-term care standards released at the end of January.
He said it's "concerning" that the P.E.I. long-term care homes are not meeting provincial standards, especially since those standards are less comprehensive than the new national standards.