as a social innovation designer, i study complex challenges with the aim to find the common approaches needed to solve these issues and not just manage the symptoms.
ltc residents are not able to choose what and when they eat, when they wake up or bathe, or when they can have visitors.
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their home features design elements that will allow them to age in place — like wheelchair accessible bathrooms, a spacious kitchen and a guest room that can be used for a live-in caretaker. the housemates pool their resources to cover costs, bardswich estimates her monthly costs at $1,100.
while $1,100 is not affordable for everyone, its considerably cheaper than a ltc facility in ontario — the long stay semi-private option is $2,280.04 per month.
co-housing can be difficult due to zoning bylaws but legislation put forth in 2019 called the golden girls act, named after bardswich and her fellow co-owners, aims to make it easier for seniors to create co-housing.
jc gilbert is the deputy chief in charge of operations at the county of simcoe paramedic services. in the five years since the launch of its community paramedicine programs, gilbert says there’s been a positive impact on patient’s overall well-being and reduced emergency calls. “we’re seeing people able to cope with their illness much better at home.”
according to dr. nowaczynski, house calls serves 450 seniors with an average age of 89. “we make it possible for our patients to live out their days at home and die at home,” he says.
dr. nowaczynski estimates that in toronto there are 100,000 to 150,000 seniors who would benefit from home-based primary care. between house calls and other programs, “we’re probably meeting the needs of not even two per cent of that population. so, we are barely scratching the surface and the consequences of that are that there’s a large population of seniors who are receiving inadequate ongoing care.”
candace chartier, president and ceo of providence living, explains that this village concept is not just about the physical design but encompasses a shift in the model of care in which residents, staff, family members work together to create a home environment where residents can thrive.
these examples show potential for the future of ltc in canada — the challenge is to make them the new standard of care instead of a patchwork of services that result in wait lists, drive-up health care costs and create confusion for seniors and their caregivers.
canada’s ltc can become a human-centred system that helps seniors get the care they need. but first we need to make humane, dignified care for seniors a top priority.
sarah tranum is an associate professor of social innovation design in the faculty of design at ocad university.
this article is republished from the conversation under a creative commons license. read the original article.