Title: Long Term Care in 2003
1Long Term Care in 2003
- A Presentation for Family, Staff, Volunteers and
Others
2Long term care in Ontario
- Publicly funded healthcare service.
- 3-party delivery partnership.
- Government funds care nursing and programs.
- Residents contribute to accommodation government
subsidy where there is demonstrated financial
hardship. - Operators private, municipal, not-for-profit,
charitable contribute to buildings and provide
management. - Accountable amount of funding, spending,
services are all government regulated. - Standards manual, reporting, funding
reconciliation, compliance, inspections etc.
3Sector size and structure
- 1998 57,000 beds 2004 - 77,000 beds.
- Government 20,000 new bed construction program.
- Modern design standards for living and privacy
spaces. - Larger, on-unit dining, less shared space, etc.
- 16,000 structurally non-compliant beds being
redeveloped to new higher design standards by
2006. - 41,000 beds, or over half the sector, in existing
homes.
4Current funding
- Government sets the amount of funding all homes
receive for care and basic accommodation and
regulates preferred (semi and private)
accommodation charges. - Nursing 59.81
- Programs 5.35
- Accommodation 45.57
- Total 110.73 (prpd)
5Long term cares reality
- 2001independent MOHLTC funded Level of Service
Study showed Ontario funded the lowest level of
care of 11 jurisdictions in the study. - Over an hour less care each day than residents
received in Saskatchewan in 1999 (8th in the
Study), and 2 hours less than in Mississippi. - Yet, Ontario residents had amongst the highest
levels of care needs. - Confirmed that care funding had not kept pace
with the increased care residents now needed. - MOHLTC data shows care needs have increased by
17.5 in past 10 years.
6Resident care needs profile
- Average age is 86.
- 9 out of 10 need help to dress and eat.
- 9 out of 10 are incontinent.
- 8 out of 10 need some help to move about.
- 6 out of 10 suffer from dementia and related
disorders. - 5 out of 10 have some medical condition and some
more than one. - Residents need average of 6 medications per day.
- Source 2002 MOHLTC Level of Care Classification
Survey.
7Whats been happening
- OLTCA identified 750 million required over three
years to bring Ontarios level of service to
Saskatchewan. - Move Ontario into the Top 10.
- Began advocating in 2001.
- Major campaign in 2002.
- Over 55,000 residents, families and others signed
cards asking government to provide more care.
8Governments response
- Increased operating funding by 230 million
- 60 million in 2001 (2.60 prpd)
- 170 million in 2002 (6.33 prpd)
- Announced 7.02 per day increase in resident
co-payment - 3.02 in 2002 (included in 170 million)
- 2 in 2003 (50 million per year)
- 2 in 2004 (50 million per year)
9A small step
- Began to address highest priority residents
needs. - Created public awareness and concern.
10But, Ontario is still last!
- Residents still get 45 minutes less care each day
than those in Saskatchewan got in 1999. - Not enough staff in the homes to provide the care
and assistance needed. - Not enough staff to provide the specialized 11
small group and evening and weekend programming
residents need and Compliance Advisors recommend. - 9 out of 10 still dont get the physical therapy
that would help maintain their strength and
health. - Less than half get the special exercises they
need to deal with stroke and other physical
conditions. - Increasingly difficult to meet nutritional and
special diet needs on 4.49 per resident per day
provided for raw food costs.
11And now, two classes of accommodation
- Government programs to build 20,000 new beds, and
redevelop 16,000 D beds mean - 41,000 residents, or over half the sector, will
not have access to the new living and privacy
standards. - This is an issue of fairness and equity for the
majority of LTC residents.
12People are concerned
- OLTCA, the Provincial Auditor, some politicians
and consumer groups have spoken out. - October 2002 results from an Ipsos-Reid Survey
conducted for OLTCA showed - 72 agreed that raising levels of care to match
Saskatchewan should be a government spending
priority. - 90 agreed that government should introduce a
program that would enable existing homes to
redevelop to improve resident comfort and
privacy. - 72 agreed that government and residents should
share the increasing costs of long term care
But, only 3 said it should be the resident alone.
13The questions is.. Is government concerned, or
do they think they have already taken care of the
needs of the oldest, frailest and sickest people
in this province?
14What is still needed
- A government commitment to increase operating
funding by 260 million (10 per resident per
day) in 2003 and again in 2004. - Raise Ontarios level of care to Saskatchewans
in 1999. - Move Ontario into the Level of Service Study Top
10. - A government commitment to introduce a capital
renewal program that would enable older homes to
upgrade their living and privacy standards.
15These commitments would..
- Provide more care staff to assist residents with
health care and daily living needs. - Provide more programming staff for the
individual, small group, evening and weekend
programming that is recommended and required. - Provide more access to physical therapy, special
exercise and other services. - Provide increased access to enhanced privacy,
living, dining and activity design standards.
16Yet, governments only commitment is.. That
residents will pay 2 more per day in 2003 (50
million) and another 2 per day (50, million)
more in 2004.
17Ontarios seniors deserve more We need your help
to tell government It is time to do your share,
too!
18Why we need your help
- Additional operating funding and a capital
renewal program to support better resident care
and service is about political choice. - Your tangible support will
- Help convince government it is the right choice.
- Help demonstrate that residents needs have not
been met. - Residents may be out of sight, but they are no
longer out of mind.
19How you can help..
- Contact your MPPcall, write, email and ask
him/her to tell government that it is time to do
their share for long term care. - Contact information for MPPs is available on the
OLTCA web site at www.oltca.com. - Sign the Do Your Share Card that is available
here. - Talk to your family members and friends and
enlist their support.
20What this home is doing
- Through OLTCA we are lobbying government
intensely and directly. - We are one of over 360 member OLTCA homes across
the province actively seeking the support of
staff, families, volunteers and others. - Circulating information inserts in account
statements. - Holding meetings such as this.
- Getting Do Your Share cards signed.
- We will deliver all signed cards to MPP
constituency offices on March 7 as part of
province-wide initiative - The more cards, the more we show that people care
and the more we demonstrate that government
should do more.
21QUESTIONS