
Province moving ahead with plan to add more long-term care beds, health minister says
CBC
P.E.I.'s health minister says the province is ready to move forward with a plan to expand long-term care beds on the Island.
In the legislature Tuesday, Minister of Health and Wellness Mark McLane said a tender has been issued to add 50 new private long-term care beds. Such a commitment includes ensuring there's enough staff in a facility to provide care to the patient in that bed.
McLane was answering Liberal MLA Gord McNeilly, who wanted to know the status of a previously cancelled tender for 175 private beds. That request for proposals was cancelled almost a year ago.
"You had an RFP out for 175 beds that was cancelled. We're waiting for that to be reissued. Minister, where is the RFP for 175 long-term care beds?" McNeilly asked during question period.
McLane responded: "We will post that RFP when the other 50-bed RFP closes. We don't want them out in the market at the same time. It will be posted the next day."
The current tender for 50 beds is set to close on Thursday.
McNeilly then asked for a timeline on when those beds might be available. McLane said that when the province added 50 beds last year, some opened within 30 to 60 days, but others required more time for capital improvements to facilities and certification to ensure they met the necessary long-term care specifications.
"So each situation is different," he said.
In the throne speech opening the spring session of the legislature two weeks ago, the Rob Lantz government said it would add and fund 50 more beds in public long-term care homes and 175 beds in private facilities.
The issue affects more than just seniors waiting for a long-term care bed. During a hearing in February 2024, MLAs were told that 14 per cent of beds in Island hospitals were being occupied by patients waiting for long-term care, so other kinds of patients can't be admitted for hospital care.
McNeilly also raised concerns about the province's first-available-bed policy.
It means that if a suitable bed is not available in a senior's first choice for a care home, that person will be asked to move to the first available bed anywhere in the system. If they decline that bed while waiting in hospital, the hospital may proceed with discharging them without a care bed in place.
McNeilly said the policy is affecting Islanders, especially those in rural areas, where elderly couples are being separated and families are struggling to visit loved ones due to long travel distances.
"That's cold, that's clinical and it's cruel. This government created the long-term care backlog, yet Island families are being punished and separated for your lack of planning," he said.

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