Timely Yet Long Overdue: Canadian Standards for Long-Term Care Homes

Authors

  • Julia Kirkham University of Calgary
  • Alvin Keng University of Toronto; Baycrest Health Sciences
  • David Conn University of Toronto; Baycrest Health Sciences
  • Sophiya Benjamin McMaster University; University of Ottawa
  • Dallas Seitz University of Calgary
  • Marie-France Rivard University of Ottawa
  • Brenda Martinussen Canadian Coalition for Senior's Mental Health
  • Cindy Grief University of Toronto; Baycrest Health Sciences
  • Claire Checkland Canadian Coalition for Senior's Mental Health
  • Kiran Rabheru University of Ottawa; Schlegel-UW Research Institute for Aging

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5770/cgj.27.706

Keywords:

mental health, mental health care, residential care, aging care, quality of care, quality of life, human rights

Abstract

The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic highlighted sys-temic problems in Canadian long-term care (LTC). While high mortality rates in LTC received significant attention, the pandemic also took an enormous toll on mental health of LTC residents, where mental health conditions, including cognitive disorders, are already much higher than in other community settings. The pandemic resulted in a renewed interest in improving quality of care in LTC and led to the recent development of several National Standards of Canada. The newly available Standards set ambitious targets, but many of the standards are practical and essential to moving beyond a focus on safety and physical needs in LTC and towards one that supports residents as whole persons. While the standards support good mental health indirectly, there is a need to recognize mental health in these settings as a fundamental human right and essential to quality of life, and for this to be reflected in ongoing and future standards development. Ensuring existing and forthcoming National Standards are meaningfully implemented, in whole or in part, will require extensive efforts at multiple levels. The guidance provided by Canadian Standards will shape this transformative process, necessitating aligned federal and provincial investments and policies, and stakeholder engagement to bring about the envisioned high-quality care.

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Published

2024-03-04

How to Cite

1.
Kirkham J, Keng A, Conn D, Benjamin S, Seitz D, Rivard M-F, Martinussen B, Grief C, Checkland C, Rabheru K. Timely Yet Long Overdue: Canadian Standards for Long-Term Care Homes. Can Geriatr J [Internet]. 2024 Mar. 4 [cited 2024 Dec. 3];27(1):76-9. Available from: https://cgjonline.ca/index.php/cgj/article/view/706

Issue

Section

Perspectives