Thank you.
My name is Paulette Guitard and I am an occupational therapist. I am an associate professor at the University of Ottawa and also the director of the occupational therapy program there. I've just finished my term as president of the Canadian Association of Occupational Therapists that I am representing today, and we thank you all for your invitation.
Before I delve into the subject, I would like to give you a brief overview of our profession and our association.
Occupational therapy came into existence around 1915, just after the First World War when the soldiers were coming back with their injuries and trying to transition to their daily lives. Occupational therapists helped them restore, through meaningful occupation, their physical issues, mental health issues, and their social capabilities.
Today our CAOT, which was founded in 1926, has about 9,000 members, and we represent 15,000 occupational therapists within the country with a master's level entry to practice. We also have post-graduate degrees in areas of specialization.
As occupational therapists we help people do the occupations that are meaningful to them in their everyday lives, and by occupation I mean everything the person does from the time they get up in the morning to the time they go to bed at night, whether it is paid work, going to the bank, driving to the bank, playing with your child, or watching a hockey game with friends.
As occupational therapists we ensure that the person has the skills to meet their occupation and we also look at the environment in which the occupation is being done to ensure there is a perfect fit between all of them.
Just to let you know, we work with people of all ages and we work mostly in hospitals, schools, homes, everywhere where people have occupations.
Coming back to the subject, there are four things we would like to talk to you about, where in the federal arena, the occupational therapist scope of practice could be better used: better representation in first nations and Inuit communities; veterans communities; correctional services; and also general health and community care, especially for the aging population.
Starting with the first nations and Inuit communities, the first problem is access. There is very limited occupational therapy service able to serve that population. In B.C., for example, less than 5% of the occupational therapists are employed in remote first nations communities, so access for those people is very limited.
There are several things we can do to increase that. One of the things we've noticed in education is that when people are trained, they go back to where they came from. If we can get youth from the first nations and Inuit communities into specific programs, they could go back to serve their communities, and that would be helpful.
We might also look at foreign trained professionals. More and more there are demands for foreign trained people to come to Canada. It's my understanding that occupational therapy is no longer a part of the national occupational classification, so that foreign-trained occupational therapists can take advantage of the express entry system under the federal skilled worker program.
That would be something we could look at because there are roughly 175 foreign-trained occupational therapists who take the national certification examination every year. As of May 2015 it will cost a foreign-trained OT about $4,000 to qualify to practise in Canada, so if there could be some funding available, that would be helpful. Maybe in return, they could have a period of time that they could devote to this community, which would also help.
The second thing is that the non-insured health benefits program is causing a lot of frustration. When you have an occupational therapist who is meeting with a client who needs a wheelchair, for example, the occupational therapist completes his or her assessment, talks to the supplier, the supplier might even be in another territory or another province, and then that person needs to go back to the program. Then the program comes back to the supplier, who then goes back to the OT, and it takes months before the person actually gets the wheelchair, so they are limited within their occupation during all that time. If there were a clearer process, we believe these people would be better served by our skilled people.
I mentioned that occupational therapy started after World War I. It's very interesting to see that today there is very limited occupational therapy within veterans' services.
We've tried over the last few years to make some headway. We have, but there's still very limited occupational therapy involvement for these people who are coming back from outside of the country. Occupational therapists are employed as policy analysts and case managers, which is not necessarily a bad thing, but it prevents the client from having direct access to an occupational therapist who will be able to help them return to the occupation that is meaningful to them.
Where OTs are employed, it's often on a contractual basis. They're relegated to the periphery and not included in the decision-making for their client. This also limits our scope of practice. Privately contracted OTs are sometimes also used to review reports, and this is not an effective use of OT scopes of practice, education, training, or competency and skill sets. We can also help not only with the injuries but with the transition from military to civilian life.
The other sector is correctional services. This is another federal arena where there are very few OTs who are involved, and as we all know, this population has a lot of mental health issues. This is one of the arenas where occupational therapists can have an impact. These people are going back to their communities without having developed any better coping skills than they had before they went into prison. It's a perpetual circle. We would be hoping to make headway into the correctional services to have better service for that population.
With regard to health care in community and the aging population, we would like to talk briefly about some of the initiatives our association has done to help older adults live more independently and as actively as possible.
We've worked a lot on the older driver blueprint. The goal is to help older adults maintain their licences for as long as possible, but to be safe because we're all sharing the road. We believe there are a lot of things that we can do. As part of that, we are hosting the CarFit educational program. That's another initiative where we have partnered with CAA. We've noticed, and there are statistics from Transport Canada, that a lot of older adults or seniors are driving and there are a lot of fatalities. We also know that a lot of times these happen because the cars are not properly adapted to the person. There are a lot of adjustments that can be done, but older adults do not know about these and don't know how to do them. For about $500, we can host an event where we can show people how to be better suited in their own cars and make sure that the car is best suited to them.
Another project would be elder abuse. This project came into effect because a lot of our members were working in homes and asking us what to do when they suspect elder abuse. We got some funding to look at this issue, and now we're hosting train the trainer programs to train people to prevent, detect, and intervene appropriately when elder abuse is taking place. This is not just for occupational therapists, but we're broadening this to physiotherapists, speech language pathologists, nurses, social workers, anybody who's working with the elderly population.
I would like to conclude by saying that one of the things that would be helpful would be to look at OT as a return on investment. When you look at costs, a day in a hospital is about $1,000 very minimally, and it's $130 for a long-term care facility. One day at a supportive housing or home in community care costs about $55. Occupational therapists are looking at helping people to stay in their homes longer and safer, so we're keeping people out of the hospitals and saving the system a lot of money.
Lastly, one of the things we would like is that occupational therapy be included in the extended health benefits for federal workers; that is not always the case. There's a limited amount of money, so people who require our services are not able to get them.
I would stop there, if you would have any questions.