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Manitoba

72-year-old returning home from Parkview Place after family advocates for discharge

After weeks of waiting, Charles Scribe, a 72-year-old residential school survivor, is going back home after what his daughter describes as a traumatic experience at the site of one of Manitoba's worst care home outbreaks.

Charles Scribe, a residential school survivor, 'feels pretty traumatized' from his time at Parkview: daughter

Charles Scribe, right, had been living at Parkview Place since March. His daughter Lisa Muswagon, left, and his wife had been calling for his discharge since the COVID-19 outbreak there worsened. (Submitted by Lisa Muswagon)

After weeks of waiting, a 72-year-old man is returning home after being discharged from Parkview Place, the site of one of Manitoba's worst long-term care homeoutbreak of COVID-19.

CharlesScribe's daughter, Lisa Muswagon, and his wife were advocating to bring him home as the COVID-19 situation at the downtown Winnipeg care home worsened. Last week, they got the call that Scribe was coming home.

"There area lot of different feelings. You don't know how to feel because there's so many things going on at the same time," Muswagon said in an interview withCBC Radio'sUp To SpeedTuesday.

"You don't know if you should feel offended orif you should feel like, 'Hey, you know what? They try.'"

Scribe had been living at Parkview Place since March. But the long-term care home moved tocritical-level restrictions under the province's pandemic response systemon Sept. 16, after a staff member tested positive.So far,120 residents living at Parkviewand 43 staff have tested positive for COVID-19. Twenty-ninehave died in that outbreak.

Muswagon and her mother were concerned for Scribe when they wouldn't hear from the nurses about the situation in Parkview Place, and were primarily relying on news reports.

To date, 29 Parkview Place residents have died in a COVID-19 outbreak at the care home. (Lyzaville Sale/CBC)

But incidents Scribe had told his family about over phone conversations were more concerning. Scribe told them that he wasn't being changed or checked on regularly. One night, he fell on his way to the washroom and was not tended to for hours, Muswagontold CBC News in a previous interview.

When Scribe officially left the care home, he was only given a blanket and discharge papers, said Muswagon.

Scribe, a residential school survivor, described his time in Parkview as one of the toughest times of his life, his daughter says.

"I'm sure in the coming weeks he'll be sharing with us his experiences. But right now, he says he feels pretty traumatized and that he's just looking forward to resting," she said. "He didn't really sleep much last night, according to my mother."

CBC News has contacted Revera, the companythat managesParkview Place, for comment but they did not immediately respond.

Scribe has several health issues that require him to have a certain level of care throughout the day, said Muswagon.So she and her mother had to call on the community for helpto enable him to live at home.

A health-care aide will be coming in to help him, she said, while otherfamily members help withtasks such as trips for essential items.

Now that Scribe is out of the care home,Muswagon is unsure whether a spot will be reserved for him to go back once the situation calms down.

But she and her mother don't want him to go back there anyway, she says.

More support for care homes bothfinancially and in staffingwould need to be in place before they would consider having him live there again,Muswagon said.

In the meantime, shesaid she will continue advocating for seniors in care homes in Manitobawho may not have a family to turn to for help.

With files from Sam Samson