Stop 'warehousing' seniors and build small homes for long-term care: aging institute

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By News Room 12 Min Read


TORONTO – Before Allan Dugas moved into long-term care, he feared he’d be forced to share a bedroom in an impersonal, institutional building, where a regimented schedule would dictate when he ate and what time a staff member would “barge in” to get him out of bed early every morning.

So after he was hospitalized for a fall, he chose to be discharged to a facility that health-care workers told him they’d be comfortable placing their own parents — a “small care home” in Digby, N.S., made up of 10 houses, each with nine residents and a small group of designated staff.

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