New dementia wing set to open soon at Charlottetown seniors' home
'The demand for dementia care is rising,' says the CEO of P.E.I Seniors Homes
The Garden Home in Charlottetown hopes anew dementia wing will help many seniors in need of specialized care.
The nursing home is set to open a new 11-bed unit for seniors living with dementia in early May.
"The demand for dementia care is rising," saidJason Lee, CEO of P.E.I. Seniors Homes.
Lee said that in the past, if some existing residents developed more serious dementiaand needed a secure unit, they would have to be transferredto another home.
"The fact that their dementia becomes more advanced shouldn't be a reason for them to have to leave," he said.
Lee said he's grateful to Health PEI for allowing the facility to add a dementia wing.
The home didn't addmore licences forbeds but rather converted some of its normal nursing bed licences to dementia care beds.
The home will actuallyhave six fewerbeds overall after it addsthe dementia care unit.
Issuein the legislature
The issue of patients living with dementia being cared for at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Charlottetown has come up in the legislature lately.
Some of the patients had previously been placed inthe Unit 9 psychiatric ward during and after the first wave ofCOVID-19 planning in 2020.
In March, Health Minister Ernie Hudson said some patients had beenmoved to theUnit 3medical nursing ward, with Health PEI sayingit was"more appropriate and allows more efficient use of staff resources."
"That's not the ideal environment for people who need to be in long-term care," said AndrewMacDougall, acting executive director for community health and seniors carefor Health PEI.
MacDougallsaidthe unit at the Garden Home is needed.
"It's timely and it's going to beimpactfulfor people who are moving there," he said.
He said he expected most of the new dementia residents for the Garden Home to come from the Queen Elizabeth Hospital.
The Alzheimer Society of P.E.I. says there is a need for more dementia care on the Island.
LauraMacWilliam, the interim executive director of thesociety, said staying in hospital and waiting for a nursing home spot can be particularly stressful forindividuals with dementia and their families.
"A hospital setting isn't ideal for anybody, let alone when you're adding someone who has a neurological disease happening," saidMacWilliam.
She said a hospital setting usually is toostimulating for people with dementia.
MacWilliamsaid dementia units in nursing homes give people a betterquality of life.
Home-like environment
Staff at the Garden Home say everything from the colours on the walls to specialized lightfixtures in thenew unit have been chosen to help people relax.
"Being able to give Islanders a place to go that's not the hospital was our end goal, and we're really excited to be able to do that," said Kristina Butler, the operations manager at the Garden Home.
Butler said on top of the 11 beds, there will also be a living room and kitchen area for residents to enjoy, and a local artist will come in to do specialized art on the walls.
"It's justgoing to be bright and not institutional. That was our goal to have something that feels like home for people," said Butler.
The dementia until will go by the nameMapleview.It's expected to open by May 10.
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Corrections
- An earlier version of this story cited Health Minister Ernie Hudson as saying in March that some patients with dementia were moved into the Unit 9 psychiatric ward as a result of the hospital having to create space for COVID-19 patients. In fact, that happened last spring; the minister said in March that some patients with dementia were being moved from Unit 9 into Unit 3.Apr 30, 2021 1:13 PM AT