Modernization will Improve Access to Quality Care for Seniors across Province
The Ontario government is moving forward with 29 new long-term care projects, which will lead to an additional 3,000 new and upgraded long-term care spaces across the province. These projects will help reduce waitlists and improve the quality of care and quality of life for seniors. This initiative is part of the 2020 Budget, Ontario’s Action Plan: Protect, Support, Recover, a comprehensive action plan to respond to the serious health and economic impacts of COVID-19.
Details were provided today at The Ottawa Hospital by Dr. Merrilee Fullerton, Minister of Long-Term Care.
“Protecting our loved ones and ensuring they receive the care they deserve is at the centre of everything we do,” said Minister Fullerton. “With this announcement, our government is taking another step towards creating a 21st century long-term care sector that provides the highest quality of care for our most vulnerable people, where and when they need it.”
Among the 29 new long-term care projects, 19 will include campuses of care where multiple services are provided for residents on the same site. In Ottawa, the province is proceeding with two projects. These consist of 256 new spaces at Schlegel Villages (The Ottawa Hospital, Riverside site), where a campus of care will provide specialized units for dementia, mental health, and complex physical needs; and, to replace Carlingview Manor, a brand new 320-space home in Orléans.
In addition to the 29 projects announced today, Ontario is investing an additional $761 million to build and renovate 74 projects under the modernized funding model, creating close to 11,000 safe, modern spaces. The new model has been designed to provide tailored incentives to address the needs of developers in different markets: rural, mid-size, urban and large urban. This approach will ensure long-term care homes across the province are being built to modern standards that keep residents safe, by addressing issues like infection prevention and control, and replacing ward rooms with single and double-occupancy rooms. This new approach is being applied to all long-term care projects moving forward.
Working together with long-term care partners, Ontario continues to use innovative ideas and modern solutions to help increase long-term care capacity in communities across the province. The government is also driving the development of new long-term care spaces by selling surplus lands with the requirement that long-term care homes be built on portions of the properties, and through the Accelerated Build pilot program, which is adding 1,280 spaces in a matter of months, not years.
The 2020 Budget, Ontario’s Action Plan: Protect, Support, Recover, is the next phase of a comprehensive strategy to respond to the serious health and economic impacts of COVID-19.
Quick Facts
- The 29 new projects consist of 2,983 long-term care spaces, including 1,968 new and 1,015 upgraded spaces.
- Ontario is investing $1.75 billion to create 30,000 beds over ten years. Today’s announcement brings the total number of new and upgraded long-term care spaces in the pipeline to 22,368.
- As of June 2020, more than 38,500 people are on the waitlist to access a long-term care bed.
- Ontario is committing to an average of four hours of direct care per day for our loved ones living in long term care homes. Ontario is the first province in Canada to take this important step.
- Ontario’s Action Plan sets out a total of $45 billion in support over three years to make available the necessary health resources to continue protecting people, deliver critical programs and tax measures to support individuals, families and job creators impacted by the virus, and lay the groundwork for a robust long-term economic recovery for the province