I think other people on the panel may have some views on this, as well.
I have one point of clarification. The home-care project focused on in-home care. Residential facilities would be considered in-home, although we didn't include them in our study, because we felt they were different, in terms of the institutional context.
I believe in a multipronged approach and that existing long-term care facilities need to think about access and equity, and access and equity frameworks that explicitly address LGBTQ2 people moving into those spaces. I also feel there is perhaps a need for separate places for people to live, at this point. Many of the facilities aren't looking at LGBTQ policies and practices.
Tamara Sussman, from the McGill University school of social work, did what I would consider to be a bit of a scoping review. I was part of that work, more marginally. They called a number of different long-term care facilities—and you'll have to excuse me, I can't remember right now whether it was in Quebec or beyond—to ask about the policies they have related to older LGBTQ people moving into those spaces. I don't think there was one institution that had a policy, so in the absence of existing institutions expanding their ideas around access and equity, I think separate spaces are probably very much needed.
Other people probably have some ideas around that, as well.