
"The government found that their 2022 law known as Bill 7, which was criticized for allowing people to be placed in a long-term care home not of their choosing, also led to declining and mismatched admissions to the province's cultural homes. Long-Term Care Minister Natalia Kusendova-Bashta implemented a pilot project in April in 29 homes that serve a particular religious, ethnic or linguistic community and she says that has been successful."
"The new rules allow placement co-ordinators to prioritize cultural admissions within the crisis category, which largely consists of people waiting in hospital, instead of going strictly by position on the crisis list."
"That is now being expanded to all of Ontario's 59 cultural long-term care homes. Lisa Levin, the CEO of AdvantAge Ontario, representing non-profit long-term care homes, says the expansion "will help ensure more seniors can access care that reflects their language, faith, food and traditions, while still prioritizing those with the greatest needs for placement.""
Ontario expanded rules to place seniors in culturally appropriate long-term care homes after finding the 2022 Bill 7 contributed to declining and mismatched admissions to cultural homes. Bill 7 had allowed placements in homes not of residents' choosing and affected admissions to community-specific homes. A pilot launched in April across 29 homes serving particular religious, ethnic or linguistic communities and was successful. New rules let placement coordinators prioritize cultural admissions within the crisis category, which mainly includes people waiting in hospital, rather than strictly by crisis-list position. The policy is now expanding to all 59 cultural long-term care homes to improve access while addressing urgent needs.
Read at www.cbc.ca
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