The Ford government is facing mounting pressure to clarify how a new piece of health-care legislation could affect Ontario families, since it would allow hospital patients to be moved to a long-term care facility not of their choosing or potentially face hefty daily fees.
The spotlight comes just as the government moved a motion to advance the bill directly to third reading┬атАФ which means it will not be considered by committee or subject to public hearing at that stage.
Long-term Care Minister Paul Calandra tabled Bill 7 last week. The legislation would give hospitals the authority to temporarily move patients no longer needing acute care into long-term care homes chosen by a placement co-ordinator. Hospitals would be required to make “reasonable efforts” to obtain patient consent, but the text of the bill says it could be done without consent if necessary.
The legislation has come under scrutiny this week from opposition parties and some health-care experts, who have raised concerns about its vague wording and questioned how it could ultimately impact patients and their families.
“The government has provided no clarity. And they are talking about moving people, possibly far away from their families and their support. You know, we’re not moving livestock around here, it’s not cattle. They are people. They are vulnerable,” said interim Liberal Leader John Fraser at Queen’s Park this morning.
Fraser and fellow Liberal MPP Dr. Adil Shamji held a news conference to air their own concerns about Bill 7 and encourage the Progressive Conservative government to withdraw the bill as it is written.
“It is actually cruel that the government is being so damn vague. There is no reason for it,” Fraser said.
The bill is part of a larger plan┬аfirst announced┬аtwo weeks ago by Health Minister Sylvia Jones to help┬аease pressures on the health-care system. Proposed changes┬аaim┬аto┬аhire more health professionals, free┬аup hospital beds and reduce┬аsurgical wait lists as┬аemergency departments across the province close their doors for hours or days at a time due to staff shortages.
An especially controversial element of the legislation is exactly what steps hospitals could take if patients refuse to be transferred to a long-term care home not of their choosing. The legislation doesn’t allow patients to be physically forced to move, but it’s not clear what would happen if a patient refuses a transfer.
How hospitals can charge patients┬а
In an interview with CBC Radio’s Metro Morning on Thursday, Dr. Samir Sinha, head of geriatrics at Sinai Health and the University Health Network in Toronto, explained how the current system works.
Patients list several long-term care homes they would consent to move to after they no longer require hospital care, he said. If the patient is accepted into one of those facilities, but cannot be moved right away, the hospital will charge about $62 per day for the interim period, the same co-pay amount the patient would face in long-term care.┬а
If the┬аpatient deemed no longer in need of acute care refuses to consider alternative facilities for care┬аor to move after being┬аaccepted to one of their preferred long-term care choices, a spokesperson for┬аthe hospital network added, a hospital can formally discharge them and bill the uninsured daily rate.
That can be $1,500 or more per day.┬а
“Often, the discussion about the cost of remaining in an acute care bed is enough to start the discussions needed to support someone in an [alternate level of care] environment,” said┬аUHN senior public affairs advisor Rosa Kim.┬а
Metro Morning8:15Charging elderly patients to leave their hospital bed for long term care will leave vulnerable people behind: Dr. Samir Sinha
Unclear from the existing text of the legislation, however, is if a long-term care facility chosen by a placement co-ordinator for a patient then becomes a preferred choice, even if the patient has no interest in going there.
CBC Toronto has reached out the Ministry of Long-term Care for more information.
During a scrum at Queen’s Park Wednesday, Calandra endorsed hospitals charging uninsured daily rates to patients who refuse to be transferred to a facility of their choice, saying the beds are needed for others.
“If someone refuses to move into a home, if someone refuses to move into a home of their preferred choice, then yes, should a hospital charge them? Absolutely. Because we need those spaces for patients who need acute care. We need them for surgery, we need them for emergency rooms,” he told reporters.
Fraser said the looming threat of a steep bill should not be used to coerce patients to move into long-term care homes they have not chosen.
“The government needs to say тАФ unequivocally тАФ that this will not happen,” he said.
What comes next?┬а
The bill is currently in its second reading. No committee meetings have been scheduled to gather public input on it.
Sinha said he is already hearing from concerned patients and their families about what the bill could mean for them moving forward.
“They are scared. They are worried,” Sinha told CBC Radio’s Metro Morning on Thursday.
Because the proposed bill theoretically could see patients moved to long-term care facilities not of their choice, without their consent, or face crushing daily fees, it would leave many families in “horrific situations,” Sinha said.
“This will only strain relationships and engender less trust between health professionals and their patients, between hospitals and patients.”