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Fairness by design — implementation of the More Beds, Better Care Act, 2022

To anticipate the changes from the More Beds, Better Care Act, 2022, our Fairness by Design resource helps hospitals and Home and Community Care Support Service organizations proactively review the fairness of their processes and decision-making.

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Discharge and transitions of care represent a significant portion of complaints to Patient Ombudsman: 12% of hospital complaints, 6% of home and community care complaints, and 5% of long-term care home complaints.

Most of these complaints involve discharges from hospitals, and many include issues with transitions from hospitals to other care settings. Patients and caregivers report concerns about lack of coordinated discharge planning, lack of patient and family engagement in planning and poor or coercive communication.

In 2022/23, Patient Ombudsman dealt with 136 complaints related to long-term care placement. Three quarters of the complaints were about placement into long-term care from hospitals, and the rest reflected concerns about placement from the community into long-term care, or long-term care home residents waiting for transfers to preferred homes.

In September 2022, the Ontario government amended parts of the Fixing Long-Term Care Act, 2021 to expedite the process of moving hospital patients who require “alternate level of care” to long-term care homes. The amending legislation, the More Beds, Better Care Act, 2022, allows placement coordinators to determine eligibility for and authorize admission to a long-term care home without a patient’s consent in some circumstances. Related changes to the regulations allow patients to be placed up to 70 kilometres from their preferred location in southern Ontario and up to 150 kilometres in the North. In addition, patients moving to long-term care homes from hospitals must be placed in the “crisis” category (unless they qualify for a higher priority category), giving them priority over many others waiting for placement into long-term care from the community or transfers between homes. Patient Ombudsman received a number of complaints from patients and caregivers concerned about the possible impact of the legislation, but ultimately did not receive complaints from patients directly affected by this legislation. We did receive a number of complaints from people waiting for long-term care placement from the community or to transfer to another long-term care home who were affected when hospital patients were prioritized. We continue to monitor these types of complaints.

Our response

In anticipation of this significant change, Patient Ombudsman released its first Fairness by Design resource in November 2022 to proactively address stakeholder concerns about the controversial legislation.

The resource is meant to help inform hospitals and Home and Community Care Support Services organization about the procedural safeguards that are needed to ensure that the long-term care placement process is fair and reasonable, whether placement occurs with or without the consent of the patient and substitute decision-maker. It allows health sector organizations to proactively review their processes to ensure greater fairness for residents and their families.

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