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Military report reveals what sector has long known: Ontario's nursing homes are in trouble

A new report from the Canadian Armed Forces has shone a light on shocking conditions inside five Ontario long-term care homes, but many including the government itself say problems have been known for years.

System has been 'ignored' and 'neglected' for decades, says province's minister for long-term care

A woman with a walker is in a green space near tall buildings.
The Canadian Armed Forces on Tuesday released a scathing report about the conditions at five Ontario long-term care homes, but many including the government itself say problems have been known for years. (CBC)

Jacqueline Mitchell hasn't been able to hug her 94-old-mother since March, and now, in the face of a shocking Canadian Armed Forces (CAF) report into the state of five Ontario long-term care homes, she is aghast.

Mitchell's mother has Alzheimer's disease and has been a resident at Etobicoke, Ont.'s Eatonville Care Centre since 2017. That's one of the homes listed in the report, which details disturbing observations made by military members who were called in to help after some of the province's long-term care facilities were overrun by COVID-19 outbreaks.

The CAF report outlines instances in which members spotted equipment used on both infected and non-infectedpatients without being disinfected, as well as rotten food, cockroach infestationsand a startling disregard for basic cleanliness.

"It is scandalous. It is shameful. It is shocking," Mitchell said. "Our senior generation is living in that, and that is a national atrocity."

There are many signs theprovincial government knew, or should have known, what's happening inside these homes, but it took military intervention to bring the details to light.

WATCH | Minister of Long-Term Care discusses military report:

Merrilee Fullerton, Ontario Minister of Long-Term Care, speaks about a Canadian military report

4 years ago
Duration 2:02
Merrilee Fullerton, Ontario Minister of Long-Term Care, says the province is committed to fixing long-term care homes in need of help after a report by the Canadian military on conditions in five facilities.

For weeks, Ontario Premier Doug Ford has been saying the province's long-term care system is "broken." And on Tuesday he said that he saw firsthand the limitations of the system when his brother, former Toronto mayor Rob Ford, was in palliative care before his death in 2016.

That, to Mitchell, signalled an acknowledgement on the premier's part that something was very wrong with the system.

"That should have alerted him on a personal basis to what was happening in these homes. He should not be surprised," she said.

Since the first weeks of the pandemic, Fordhas been advocating for the need to put an "iron ring" aroundOntario's long-term care homes, with the province touting measures it has enacted to keep people safe, like limiting visitors and preventing most caregivers from working at multiple homes. The province then asked for the military's helplate last month.

As of Tuesday, the Ministry of Long-Term Care was reporting1,538 deaths linked to COVID-19, while thePublic Health Ontario Daily Epidemiologic Summary listed4,892 cases among residents.

People in white hazmat suits stand outside of a brick building. People in white hazmat suits stand outside of a brick building.
Provincial officials have asked the military to continue its mission assisting at nursing homes for an additional 30 days. (CBC)

In a statement issued Tuesday, OppositionNDP Leader Andrea Horwath slammed the government's response, and called for the resignation of Minister of Long-Term Care Merrillee Fullerton.

"It's shocking that the Canadian Armed Forces needed to lift the veilwhen Doug Ford and Merrilee Fullerton ought to have known about these horrific conditions, and did nothing to take the homes over," Horwath said. "The premier cannot pass the buck, finger-pointand express outrage about what his own government is doing on his watch."

System 'neglected and ignored' for decades

Fullerton said it was the novel coronavirus that pushed some of the province's long-term care homes to the brink.

"This is something that everyone has known about for years. Our population is aging. Long-term care was ignored. Long- term care was neglected," she said.

"We were shining a light on this. We were looking at fixing a system that had been neglected and ignored for decades and then COVID tipped the homes that were having difficulties with staffing already right over the edge."

WATCH | Marissa Lennoxof CARP saysthe system has long been broken:

'Nauseating, but not altogether shocking'

4 years ago
Duration 10:08
CARP Chief Policy Officer, Marissa Lennox, says long-term care is something people don't want to think about, and that the system has long been broken.

Ford said Tuesday that it took a constant, watchful eye from the military to truly uncover the scope of the problem.

"Yes, inspections happen and these folks come in there, but it took the military to be there 24/7," the premier said, adding it's impossible to know the extent of the problems plaguing the system "until you live, breathe, eat it ... until you're there around the clock, at nighttime and during the day."

Fullerton said Tuesday that the province conducted nearly 3,000 inspections last year at long-term care facilities, spurred by so-called critical incidents and complaints reported to an"action line" for families, residents and staff.

But a recent CBC News investigation found that last yearjust nine out of 626 homes in Ontario actually received resident quality inspections (RQIs), which are unannounced and more comprehensive than those arising from incident reports.

CBC News reviewed inspection reports from the last five years for all long-term care homes in the province and found that while most received an RQI in 2015, 2016 and 2017, the number dropped to just over half in 2018 andnine last year.

'Immediate attention' needed

In a news release issued Tuesday, Ontario Nurses' Association (ONA) president Vicki McKenna said the association has contactedthe Ministry of Labour about working conditions in long-term care homes, but the ministry has written few orders and has "rarely been on site to conduct physical inspections."

"This sector needs immediate attention," she said. "Government must act now to halt these outbreaks."

ONA's statement also notes that a number of long-term care reports have been issued in the last two decades that continue to make the same recommendations to improve the sector: more staffing, more funding, better training and increased resources.

A 2017-2018 public inquiry into the safety and security of residents in long-term care homes found "systemic vulnerabilities" in the system. The Ontario Health Coalition has for years been issuing reports about problems in long-term care, including understaffing and excessive violence.

The Ontario Personal Support Workers Association also said in a statement that these are not new problems.

"We have been working through these difficult conditions for years," the statement reads. "They have worsened over the last three months."

Laura Tamblyn Watts, CEO of national seniors'advocacy organization CanAge, told CBC News in an interview it's very telling that the state of these long-term care homes couldshock even soldierswho go on peacekeeping missions.

"How much more do we need for this government and our provinces and territories to take needed action?" she asked.

With files from CBC's Katie Pedersen