Son says long-term care changes could help father's situation - Action News
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Windsor

Son says long-term care changes could help father's situation

One Windsor-Essex man says theprovince's changes to how people move from the hospital into long-term care could help in his father's situation.

Changes to provincial rules around long-term care transfers proposed with aim of freeing up hospital beds

A low angle of a tall, hospital building.
Windsor Regional Hospital's Ouellette Campus is shown in a file photo. (Mike Evans/CBC)

One Windsor-Essex man is hopefulthat theprovince's changes to how people move from the hospital into long-term care couldsee his parents reunited sooner.

Paul Britton's father, also named Paul Britton,is atWindsor Regional Hospital awaiting a long-term care bed.

The elder Britton, who is in his 70s, was staying in Windsor prior to being admitted, butwants to join his wife at a facility at home inDurham region.

"I think it will benefit us just because my dad's goal is to go back to Oshawa," his son said.

Paul Britton thinks that proposed changes to long-term care could benefit his family's situation. (Chris Ensing/CBC)

Last week, the Ontario government proposed new legislationthat would let hospitals send patients awaiting a bed in their preferred long-term care home toto be placed in a "temporary" homeafter staffmake "reasonable efforts to obtain the patient's consent."

The move was announced as part of a plan to ease the strain on hospitals.

Last week, Windsor Regional Hospital said31 people were using acute care beds while waiting for a spot to open in their preferred long-term care home.

Britton saidunder the old rules, accepting a spot at afacility that's not his preferred location would meanhis dad would face a much longer wait to getto where he wants to be.

"He's on the list for a home, but he only chose one, which is where my mother is trying to get back with her," he said. "And the situation is if he chooses more than one and he goes to say number five on his list, he loses his crisis level. So he goes to the bottom of the list to get to his number one choice, where my mother is."

Britton said although the changes could help in his father's situation, itmay not be ideal for everyone and acknowledges the criticism the proposed legislation has prompted.

Critics have argued the changesviolate patient rights.

Dr. Samir Sinha, the National Institute on Ageing'sdirector of health policy research, says this legislationwill impact hospitals and theirability to providehigh-quality care to elderly patients.

"I fear that this is going to make it hard for people to wantto even access hospital care when they know that the risk is that they might actually be forced to actually go to a home they never, ever wanted to end up in," said Sinha, who is also the director of geriatrics at Mount Sinaiand the University Health Network in Toronto.

Paul Calandra, the minister responsible for long-term care in Ontario, said last week that no patientwould be forced to leave the hospital.

With files from Chris Ensing and Vanessa Balintec and the Canadian Press