Families want change after neglect in Canadian care homes proved deadly during the pandemic
Ottowa (CNN)The harrowing details of how so many Canadian seniors were left neglected and alone in long term care homes during the pandemic are an agony to accept, let alone, to share. But families say if they're silent now, they too, would be complicit in what they consider to be cruel and preventable deaths.
"No
 one was there to comfort her, to explain to her, that was the most 
heartbreaking for me. And she really felt abandoned, that's for sure," 
says Nicole Jaouich as she describes her mother's last days in a care 
home in Quebec.
Her
 mother, Hilda Zlataroff, was 102 years old and suffering from dementia 
when Covid-19 was first detected in her long-term care facility in March
 of last year.
Her
 family says she did not die of the virus but, as an in-room camera 
placed there by her family painfully documents, she wasted away.
Zlataroff
 was unable to feed herself without assistance and the video, provided 
to CNN by her family, shows her at times seemingly in pain, confused, 
too weak to even hold a glass of water.
"It
 was heartbreaking for me to know that I wasn't there and that the last 
six weeks of her life, she starved," said Jaouich as she shares the 
anguish of watching her mother suffering on camera, but forbidden from 
going to the care home to help.
"I was looking at my mother through the camera and she was breathing so heavily, you could see she was in pain," she said.
Canadian military brought in to help
For
 weeks after initial lockdowns last winter, the situation in dozens of 
care homes throughout the country, both public and private, grew so 
grave that by the end of April it was fast becoming a humanitarian 
crisis. Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau called in troops to help 
in some long-term care facilities in the provinces of Ontario and 
Quebec.
Trudeau said at the time that Canada was "failing" the elderly and promised that, "in the weeks and months to come, we will all have to ask tough questions about how it came to this."
To
 date, nearly 22,000 Canadians have died from Covid-19. Many of the 
families of the thousands of seniors who died in those care homes say it
 is now time to answer those tough questions. 
Coronavirus hit understaffed care homes hard
The
 crisis began in the early days of the pandemic in March, when 
provincial health officials across Canada sealed off hundreds of 
facilities to family and visitors, believing they were protecting the 
most vulnerable from the virus.
But
 within weeks, families were horrified to learn that many of these 
facilities -- already chronically understaffed -- were in a state of 
what they described as chaotic.
"It
 was quite shocking to see what was happening there, for several days 
people cannot get a hold of their loved ones," said Nadia Sbaihi in an 
interview with CNN about her grandfather's death.
Rodrigue
 Quesnel was 94 years old when he died of Covid-19. He contracted the 
virus in a long-term care facility outside of Montreal. His family 
describes him as "larger than life" and still of sound mind but he died 
of the virus within days last spring.
"If
 I regret something about those last days it's that we were robbed, 
particularly in the first wave where we were not allowed to see our 
loved ones and our loved ones died alone," says Sbaihi.
Some residents were left in soiled clothing and sheets for hours, report says
Covid-19
 rapidly spread through hundreds of long term care facilities throughout
 Canada. By June, the Public Health Agency of Canada acknowledged that 4
 in every 5 Covid-19 related deaths were in long term care homes.
"That
 decision of the government to prevent family caregivers from going in 
and to not provide for adequate personnel to provide even the most basic
 care, that decision is completely unforgivable," says Patrick 
Martin-Ménard, a lawyer representing families at a coroner's inquest now
 underway in Quebec.
An
 analysis released by the Canadian Institute for Health Information in 
June showed that Canada's proportion of deaths occurring in long-term 
care homes was double that of other developed countries.
And
 a study released in Ontario by its advisory group on Covid-19 found 
that crowding, especially in older facilities, and poor working 
conditions for staff contributed to the high rate of mortality and morbidity in the facilities. 
But
 perhaps most shocking was a blunt and tragic assessment by the Canadian
 military after they were sent into some of these facilities. 
Released
 in May in the province of Ontario, the report documents allegations of 
abuse and gross neglect in at least five care homes. 
It
 documents "dire" conditions where residents were not bathed for days, 
vulnerable seniors were kept in soiled clothing and sheets for hours, 
and where Covid-19 patients were allowed to wander.
It
 accuses five long term care facilities in the Toronto area of having 
inadequate hygiene and disinfection practices and further alleges that 
staff ignored residents who were crying in pain, sometimes for hours.
Ontario's premier was quite emotional when asked about the report and vowed there would be "justice" and "accountability."
"It's
 heartbreaking, horrific, it's shocking that this can happen here in 
Canada. It's gut-wrenching, and reading those reports is the hardest 
thing I've done as premier," said Doug Ford at a press conference in 
May.
However,
 Ontario public health officials reported last week that deaths in long 
term care homes in Ontario from the second wave of Covid-19, which began
 in September, have now exceeded those in the first wave.
Both
 the provinces of Ontario and Quebec, where the majority of nursing home
 deaths occurred, have now introduced new training programs and 
increased salary and benefits for staff at these facilities.
"I
 think we have to take a very long look at ourselves collectively and 
think about the way that we have treated our elderly population, not 
just during the pandemic but over the past ten, twenty, thirty years," 
says Martin-Ménard. 
Families hope investigations will restore a sense of dignity
Sbaihi
 believes the treatment of many of their loved ones in care homes was 
inhumane. She and other family members say that what should come of 
multiple investigations, still ongoing, is to finally give the elderly 
the attention and dignity they deserve.
"It's
 not going to bring anybody back, but hopefully we can have answers ... 
to give a voice to those who didn't have one or whose voices weren't 
heard," she says. 
Jaouich
 says her mother would not have wanted her to accept what happened to 
thousands of seniors in those care homes. And she says she's grateful 
that she did finally see her mother in her last hours and give her the 
comfort she was lacking in her final weeks of life.
"And
 I held her hand, her hands were so cold, and I was warming her hands 
and she squeezed my hand ... three  times. And this was such a moving 
moment for me, and I told her 'Mummy I didn't abandon you.'"
 
 
 







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