Evidence of meeting #31 for Health in the 42nd Parliament, 1st Session. (The original version is on Parliament’s site, as are the minutes.) The winning word was palliative.

A recording is available from Parliament.

On the agenda

MPs speaking

Also speaking

Mimi Lowi-Young  Former Chief Executive Officer of the Alzheimer Society of Canada and Health Care Executive, As an Individual
Dale Goldhawk  Vice-Chairman, Alzheimer's Disease International
David Henderson  President, Canadian Society of Palliative Care Physicians
Sheila Pither  Treasurer, Council of Senior Citizens Organizations of British Columbia
Kathleen Jamieson  Chairperson, Health Committee, Council of Senior Citizens Organizations of British Columbia
Tanya Levesque  Caregiver, As an Individual

8:45 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Bill Casey

Order. We have a little anomaly today in the way the committee is working. We are presenting a report today on opiates, and two of us will be leaving early to present the report in the House of Commons, but the meeting will carry on.

I want to seek the direction of the committee members. Normally we just say that we're tabling the report of the standing committee and then table it, but I would like to add my comments. I want to make sure it's okay with everybody if I just say that we really were impacted by the testimony, that it was very moving testimony, and that we hope that the minister and the department move forward with our recommendations.

Is that okay with everybody if I just say those words? Does that reflect what everybody thinks?

8:45 a.m.

Some hon. members

Agreed.

8:45 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Bill Casey

Okay. So that's all right with you.

It was moving testimony. I know I certainly felt the emotion in the words from the presenters. It was hard to miss how urgent the situation is.

So I will add those comments when I table the report.

This morning we're having our first meeting on Bill C-233, An Act respecting a national strategy for Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias

To our guests this morning, welcome. We look forward to your testimony.

We have Mimi Lowi-Young, who I understand is working with Dale Goldhawk, the vice-chair of Alzheimer's Disease International; from the Canadian Society of Palliative Care Physicians, Dr. David Henderson, who's from Truro; and from the Council of Senior Citizens Organizations of British Columbia, by video, Kathleen Jamieson, chairperson, and Sheila Pither, treasurer.

We welcome you all to our committee.

I understand we'll start with you, Mimi Lowi-Young, and you're going to share your time with Mr. Goldhawk. You have 10 minutes. Thank you.

8:45 a.m.

Mimi Lowi-Young Former Chief Executive Officer of the Alzheimer Society of Canada and Health Care Executive, As an Individual

Good morning to the chair, Mr. Casey, to the two vice-chairs, Mr. Webber and Mr. Davies, and to the members of the Standing Committee on Health.

I'm Mimi Lowi-Young, and I'm very honoured to be a witness for this committee's examination of Bill C-233, an act respecting a national strategy for Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias.

Presenting with me today is Mr. Dale Goldhawk in his capacity as vice-chair of Alzheimer's Disease International. Mr. Goldhawk is a veteran journalist and broadcaster. For the past 20 years, he has been an Alzheimer's volunteer and a former president of the Alzheimer Society of Canada.

8:45 a.m.

Dale Goldhawk Vice-Chairman, Alzheimer's Disease International

Good morning, Mr. Chair, honourable members, ladies and gentlemen.

Alzheimer's disease killed my father. The unrelenting emotional and physical stress also led to the death of my mother. That was 30 years ago, when we knew very little about this disease.

Dr. Alois Alzheimer first studied it in 1901, 115 years ago, and still there's no effective treatment, let alone a cure. I think that underlines the vital importance now of the passage of Bill C-233, and, following that passage, meaningful funding to help people whose lives are being profoundly affected by the heartbreak of dementia.

Just three years ago, there were only 13 countries in the world with dementia strategies. Now we have 28. I can say that after years of inaction and little progress, enthusiasm, optimism, and real action appear to be at hand. For one thing, the World Health Organization at its assembly in May of next year hopes to pass a global plan of action on dementia. It has a very blunt message: governments must implement national plans to fight dementia, take action, and do it now.

Alzheimer's Disease International research says that every three seconds, a new case of dementia is recorded in the world. Momentum, of course, is building in Canada. It begins with the passage of Bill C-233, which we need, and the Senate report on dementia released yesterday, which we also need, to help build that forward motion to chart a course of action behind the bill.

I know of no one better equipped to talk about that course of action than my colleague Mimi Lowi-Young. She has worked hard formulating that action for several years now.

Mimi.

8:50 a.m.

Former Chief Executive Officer of the Alzheimer Society of Canada and Health Care Executive, As an Individual

Mimi Lowi-Young

Thank you very much, Dale.

I come to this committee as a former CEO of the Alzheimer Society of Canada and the author of the “Canadian Alzheimer's Disease and Dementia Partnership” and the national strategy and action plan submitted to the government about four years ago now. I've also held positions as a regional health authority CEO, and I've worked in probably every segment of the health system, including acute care, rehab, and long-term care. I was also recently appointed to the institute's advisory board of CIHR as a member of the institute on chronic disease. My work will continue in an effort to help people with dementia and their families.

My mother also suffered from vascular dementia, but in those days it was identified as senile dementia. She suffered for many years, and she died spending the last month of her life in the ICU with a breathing tube.

Ladies and gentlemen, the time has come that Canada moves from writing reports, number-crunching, and vague statements about a national dementia strategy. There is a need now to make a firm commitment to a national dementia strategy and action plan, including a pan-Canadian, non-partisan entity, the Canadian Alzheimer's disease and dementia partnership, with a commitment of funding of $30 million per year, which is just less than a dollar per Canadian per year, to invest in research and knowledge translation; prevention; and living well with the disease. These are the three critical pillars of a national dementia strategy and action plan.

Let me set the context for the specifics, which should be articulated in Bill C-233, that will lead to action by the Government of Canada and the jurisdictions who have the responsibility of delivering health care services in accordance with the BNA Act and the Canada Health Act.

I would be remiss if I didn't acknowledge the outstanding and comprehensive report issued by the Senate Standing Committee on Social Affairs, Science and Technology on Tuesday of this week, chaired by the Honourable Kelvin Ogilvy and the deputy chair, Honourable Art Eggleton, P.C. This report speaks to the urgency for action and the areas of focus for the Canadian Alzheimer's disease and dementia partnership and a national dementia strategy and action plan, which I will cover in some detail shortly.

Please indulge me to give you a few numbers, even though I just said we shouldn't be number-crunching anymore.

In Canada, dementia has touched over half a million people with the disease, and it has touched many more. The number of people with dementia will double in less than 20 years. Unpaid caregivers, families, and friends involved in the care and support of individuals with dementia are also directly impacted. They are touched in so many ways by this disease, which is progressive. We have no cure or disease-modifying therapy to avert or curtail the disease.

Women are most affected by the disease, both by having the disease, at 65%, and being the primary caregiver, at 72%. Over 65% of individuals currently residing in long-term care homes have some form of dementia. A number of them could and should be being cared for in the community if there were adequate services in home and community services. Our emergency wards care for many individuals with dementia, as there are few services to deal with the many challenges of this progressive disease.

Overall, this disease has significant impact on the social and economic fabric of this country at a cost of $10.4 billion per year. This number will double in the next few years as the population ages. We have more people over the age of 65 than under the age of 14.

Another cruel reality of dementia is the stigma related to the disease. Individuals with the disease become terribly isolated from their friends and family, which leads to further deterioration of their condition. As well, physicians are reluctant to provide an individual the diagnosis of dementia, as they know they have no treatment or cure to offer.

In Canada we have research initiatives and we have programs and services available to individuals with dementia and their families, but the amount of research is very limited. Only 5% of CIHR funding goes towards dementia. The number of such programs and services is also very limited, and access depends on where the individual lives. There is poor and inconsistent coordination of care and services among health care providers in different parts of the health system. Evidence from research and best practices are inconsistently implemented, or not implemented at all: Canada is known as “pilotville”.

Is there a solution to this compelling national public health priority? Ladies and gentlemen, the answer is, yes, of course.

We need the commitment from Parliament that a national dementia strategy and action plan will be established with oversight provided by a newly established Canadian Alzheimer's disease and dementia partnership.

What are the components of a strategy and action plan? There is a desperate need to increase the investment in research. As well, the Canadian Alzheimer's disease and dementia partnership could and will bring together researchers and institutions to reduce duplication, promote sharing of information, and determine effective knowledge translation and exchange strategies, which means using evidence to improve practice and care and delivery by practitioners. Efforts to encourage innovation, investment, and drug discovery is really important.

In the area of prevention, the second pillar, the government should complete the implementation of the surveillance system for dementia by the Public Health Agency of Canada. The government should set targets for health practitioners to achieve with regard to early and improved diagnosis of the disease. The government should actively promote the evidence-based actions Canadians can partake in to reduce the risks, such as exercise, diet, blood pressure control, and the elimination of smoking, just to name a few.

The last pillar is living well with the disease. Ongoing support of Dementia Friends, with an emphasis on developing dementia-friendly communities, will assist in reducing the stigma of the disease and will improve public awareness. In an effort to maintain the independence of persons with dementia for as long as possible, the Alzheimer Society's First Link program, which is a referral program, should be standard in every community in the country.

Improved access to home and community services provided by health care providers who are trained in the delivery of care for individuals with dementia is critical. The federal government should continue to pursue efforts to support unpaid caregivers through employment insurance reform initiatives.

Finally, to prepare for the rising tide of dementia, the amount of ongoing training and education of health professionals in geriatric medicine and care must be improved and increased as soon as possible.

There is truly a window of opportunity for this government and the Parliament of Canada to provide the necessary leadership to implement a national dementia strategy and action plan for the following reasons. The conditions are right and ripe.

First of all, there's a commitment by this government to add $3 billion for home and community care, including palliative care. There is the ability to negotiate a new health accord.

There is the desire by Canadians to have a national dementia strategy. Eighty-three per cent have told us that they want one.

The Council of the Federation has identified dementia as a key priority for its health committee. Many provinces are creating provincial dementia plans, and some have already implemented them.

People with the disease and their families have growing needs and a desire to be directly involved in decision-making and policy development.

There is a rising tide of aging and dementia in Canada.

Let me conclude with a short story about Mr. and Mrs. G. Mr. G was a very successful restauranteur, and his wife worked in a hairdresser's shop serving many customers for 30 years. Mr. G had a stroke three years ago, with limited physical deficits, and Mrs. G retired two years ago.

Mrs. G needed a haircut but delayed having one for nearly a year, as she forgot about the appointments and kept calling to make the same appointment over and over again for her and Mr. G. As a result of the stroke, Mr. G now has vascular dementia. Their daughter lives with them at home but travels extensively. Mr. G still drives and Mrs. G still cooks. They're both emaciated and probably don't eat or cook very much anymore.

This situation can turn into a major disaster. Is there no safety net for a situation like this? How many more Mr. and Mrs. Gs are there in Canada?

For my final comment, I would like to quote Margaret Chan, Director-General of the World Health Organization, who captures the essence of the dementia crisis. She said:

I can think of no other disease that has such a profound effect on loss of function, loss of independence, and the need for care. I can think of no other disease so deeply dreaded by anyone who wants to age gracefully and with dignity. I can think of no other disease that places such a heavy burden on families, communities, and society. I can think of no other disease where innovation, including breakthrough discoveries to develop a cure, is so needed.

Mr. Chairman and members of HESA, please ensure that any modifications to Bill C-233 will only strengthen what Canada needs, a national dementia strategy and action plan, and the Canadian Alzheimer’s disease and dementia partnership. No more studies. No more number-crunching. We need action now.

Thank you for giving me the opportunity to present my perspective. I am committed to seeing Canada implement the strategy and plan so that Canadians with dementia and their families now and into the future will know that they can depend on their country for care and support.

Thank you very much.

9 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Bill Casey

Thank you very much for your comments.

Now we will hear from the Canadian Society of Palliative Care Physicians with Dr. David Henderson.

Welcome to our committee.

9 a.m.

Dr. David Henderson President, Canadian Society of Palliative Care Physicians

Thank you very much, Mr. Casey, honourable members, and guests.

It's with great pleasure that I'm here to speak on this, because not only am I the president of the Canadian Society of Palliative Care Physicians but I am also the son of a lovely lady with dementia. It's very timely for me to come and speak on this.

Today we have several members here who will be speaking about personal experiences and such, so I'll keep my comments to the palliative care aspect of this issue.

Our society is made up of around 500 physicians from across the country, and that includes regional leaders in palliative care, residency directors, clinicians, educators, and family physicians with a special interest in palliative care. Our society is proud to say that we support Bill C-233. I'm going to start off by giving you a few of our key messages that we want to get across.

Alzheimer's disease and other dementias are a tremendous challenge for many Canadians and their families. The needs of caring for someone with dementia are many. A national strategy clearly identifying and developing mechanisms to help Canadians manage the needs is essential, given the expected increase in the diagnosis with our aging population. Clear direction, goals, and funding for further research is imperative. Education on prevention needs to be expanded, and education on a palliative approach to care for dementia patients and families needs to be enhanced.

As we've just heard, Canada has an aging population, with one in six people having reached their 65th birthday by July 2015. That number is going to exponentially increase over the next few years. By 2024 the number of people over 65 will be more than 20% of our population. Again, as we've heard, the number of people up to age 14 is less and less. What that's telling us is that the baby boomers are climbing, we have an exponential rise in people over 65, and we don't have the same number of youth, coming up behind, to become caregivers. That will be quite an added load for everybody to be carrying.

As we've heard, dementia is a progressive deterioration of memory, reasoning, communication, orientation, judgment, and abstract thinking capacities, leading to the loss of ability to perform independent activities of daily living and eventually all activities of daily living. These are life-limiting conditions, and there are no curative treatments. Only about a third of people get a formal diagnosis. Changes in behaviours and emotions are common reasons for placement in residential care. Often these people receive very poor end-of-life care.

There are several dementia subtypes. Alzheimer's disease makes up about 47%. You can have a mix of Alzheimer's disease with other types of dementias, accounting for about 27%. There are vascular dementias, fronto-temporal dementias. With Parkinson's, you can get a Lewy body dementia. These all carry different sequelae with their symptoms.

The illness trajectory can often be long, with great disability along the way compared with that of other life-limiting conditions. From a physician point of view and from a health care point of view, communication with the person and their family early on is essential to determine their values, wishes, and goals. Within palliative care education, we spend time teaching approaches to having these conversations with primary care physicians, home care nurses, long-term care nurses and physicians, PSWs or personal support workers, and social workers.

Recently we had a wonderful education tool developed through Pallium Canada. There is education material we've been using for palliative care called “LEAP”, or learning essential approaches to palliative and end-of-life care. They recently developed “LEAP long-term care”. We were part of a pilot project with them, this being a country of pilot projects. It's amazing, even for someone who's been working in palliative care for a number of years, to look at the difference between what we're teaching for an adult and youth population versus what we're talking about for a more geriatric population. There are significant differences. You don't tend to see cancer near as much in that elderly population, basically because they have outlived the time when they are most likely to develop some of the cancers. Much more often, you're seeing multiple comorbidities such as heart disease, lung disease, and certainly cognitive diseases with dementias.

It is a wonderful nationally recognized and nationally accepted education tool. The key is to get that education out there so more practitioners and health care providers get that education. It's also multidisciplinary. This isn't something that just physicians need to be dealing with—we need our social workers, our pharmacists, our nursing staff, our PSWs, who make up much of the workforce in long-term care, to truly understand how to manage these conditions.

With palliative care in general, we're talking about a health-discipline focus on improving quality of life for people living with serious life-threatening illnesses. We have something now we've developed nationally, called the palliative approach to care. We will never have enough specialty palliative care teams to be able to care for everyone who needs access to palliative care, and nor should we. A palliative approach is really coming back to the grassroots and ensuring that we educate up our home care nurses, our family doctors, our nurse practitioners, and also our specialists, even within gerontology, to help ensure they have good palliative care knowledge and skills to be able to translate that care to the community and the home. Our cardiologists, our nephrologists, our oncologists all need to have these skills.

Grief and bereavement is something I want to make sure we bring up with too. It was alluded to earlier. As you can all imagine, if you get a diagnosis of cancer, that's a pretty shocking thing to hear. Most people will automatically think they're going to die, and you start on that trajectory and you may or may not. We don't often get told of a diagnosis of dementia until quite far into the diagnosis. So the person sometimes has a harder time understanding and coping with it.

You can only imagine what somebody goes through with a diagnosis of dementia. We all forget where we put our keys sometimes, but sometimes we start to recognize that this is getting worse and worse as time goes on. You go through repetitive losses with that. You're starting anticipatory grief earlier on, starting to recognize that you've experienced this, especially more and more now that perhaps you've seen somebody else in your family, a grandmother or great-grandmother, go through this. So you kind of know what to expect. That can be pretty devastating.

In my family, we are scattered across the country. I have sisters living in British Columbia, Alberta, and New Brunswick, and I'm in Nova Scotia. Families are more typically scattered now, and often lack the family support required to care for people. So now you often end up with a single caregiver, who is often elderly as well, often with comorbidities of their own, other health issues, trying to care for somebody with dementia. They're going through anticipatory grieving as well, and their entire lives end up being changed. There's much that needs to be done to help support these people.

I also want to point out that men who lose their wives, whether through cancer or dementia, are at a much higher risk of suicide. It's often not recognized that way. Our health system isn't necessarily responsive to that and doesn't always recognize it. It is a population to which we have to give a little extra care and do good risk assessment for bereavement.

To conclude—to take Mr. Trudeau's comments—we're palliative care and we're here to help. Our society is committed to help support Canadians with life-limiting illnesses, especially with Alzheimer's and dementia. We're happy to be part of any strategy that moves forward to try help develop a good system for Canada.

Thank you.

9:10 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Bill Casey

Thank you very much for your comments.

We're going to now move to our video conferencing with the Council of Senior Citizens Organizations of British Columbia.

Please go ahead.

9:10 a.m.

Sheila Pither Treasurer, Council of Senior Citizens Organizations of British Columbia

Thank you very much for providing us the opportunity to speak to you this morning. We have been granted 10 minutes, so we'll be brief.

We're members of the Council of Senior Citizens Organizations of British Columbia and also members of the COSCO Seniors’ Health and Wellness Institute.

First of all, I'll speak about the workshops that COSCO has. We have 43 different topics and they're presented free of charge all around the province. There's a focus on the ways we can influence our own well-being mentally and physically. Then my friend Kathleen Jamieson will speak about the need for home care for seniors with some form of mental health or cognitive decline.

Early in 2007, COSCO began a program of health care workshops. We realized as we looked at health care in British Columbia that obviously acute care is essential, but we felt that there needed to be more attention paid to preventive measures that could delay and even prevent if health literacy programs were established. We prepared the workshops in several ways. First they were prepared by medical students at the University of British Columbia under the supervision of their teachers. From the beginning, we realized that mental and physical health were intertwined, so as the time went on and we experienced a huge demand for the fall workshop, which was our first one, we gradually added others until now we have 43 different topics. We don't give advice in a personal way; we provide information and we provide resource direction, you might say, in that every workshop is accompanied by a list of organizations that people can turn to to ask for help and assistance.

We gradually through the years added workshops. Up until now, more than 30,000 people have attended. Everybody, when they're there, is asked to think about how the facts that we're giving can be used for their own well-being. We have a mental health workshop. We have a social connectedness workshop. We want to remind people how important it is to keep in touch with others. We have a caregiver workshop. We alert people to the possibilities of burnout and ways to avoid it.

Our facilitators are all seniors. They're given five days of training before they present workshops. They're not paid. They get out-of-pocket expenses. In fact, everybody involved with the program is a volunteer. We have no paid staff. We don't have an office. We are gradually reaching out to more and more parts of the province as we get facilitators around the province—Okanagan, the Kootenays. We have funding from grants and donations, and we have a pan-Canadian approach to our work. We've trained people in both Alberta and Newfoundland to facilitate workshops, and our power point presentations have been provided to other provinces.

From the very beginning, mental health and physical health have been part of the institute's programs. Many seniors tell us that they fear mental incapacity more than they fear physical incapacity. The goal of our workshops is to increase understanding and minimize fear, avoidance, and denial.

This is the final workshop I'm going to mention, but our “navigating the health care system” is a fine example of how to proceed, how to get the most out of the care that is available.

Kathleen.

9:15 a.m.

Kathleen Jamieson Chairperson, Health Committee, Council of Senior Citizens Organizations of British Columbia

Thank you.

Good morning from Vancouver. I'm going to speak today about my personal experience. I want to emphasize the absolute need for the promised billions of dollars in new home care funding from the federal government to include a very strong accountability framework. I'm going to explain what happened to me personally as I tried to access the health care system for my husband.

I cared at home for my husband, who was diagnosed seven years before he died with a rare, progressive neurological disease called multiple system atrophy, MSA, for which there is no cure or treatment. I have no nursing or medical experience. I had no health issues, however, so I believed I was able physically and emotionally to care for this person whom I loved.

I'm glad I was able to do this. I think with proper support systems, many others would be able to live at home with dementia and with complex neurological diseases, and to die at home, as so many Canadians want to do.

However, as time went on, and my husband became more uncomfortable and needed more care, I began to feel extremely tired. I sought help. I thought I needed some professional direction for the care I was providing. Despite my urgent calls to my local health authority, Fraser Health, in B.C. over the final sad months of my husband's life, I was not able to access any nursing care or any home support. He declined rapidly, physically and mentally.

He died suddenly at home one morning after falling. I tried to give him CPR, instructed by the 911 operator. Because he was not receiving any nursing or home care services from Fraser Health, and so designating as being palliative, the police and the coroner were called by the first responders who had tried unsuccessfully to revive him. Two days later I received a letter from a medical research group based at St. Paul's Hospital in Vancouver, informing me that the first responders had performed an unspecified experimental procedure on my husband as they were attempting to revive him. They said they had no need to ask permission from me as the next of kin—and I was close by—or specify what procedure they did. I followed up. I was subsequently informed by the principal researcher and emergency physician at St. Paul's that they had no need to inform me: they were sorry.

I don't want to speak today about the impact this whole experience had on my physical and mental health. I felt it must be something like PTSD. I have now met many others seniors who have had similar experiences with the B.C. health authorities. Lack of compassion is not a strong enough phrase to describe what our health care system offers to seniors in this province of B.C. I call it callous and cruel.

The Canadian Nurses Association recently noted that there's inequity in access to high-quality, publicly funded home care. They call for a robust accountability framework for home care to be part of a new health accord. We agree. Nothing less will make a difference [Technical difficulty--Editor]

9:20 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Bill Casey

We'll just suspend for a minute while we address our technical difficulties. We need to reconnect.

9:20 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Bill Casey

We're reconnected. Sorry for the interruption.

You can continue with your comments, please.

9:20 a.m.

Chairperson, Health Committee, Council of Senior Citizens Organizations of British Columbia

Kathleen Jamieson

At what point did we disconnect?

9:20 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Bill Casey

You were talking about the inequity of access to home care.

9:20 a.m.

Chairperson, Health Committee, Council of Senior Citizens Organizations of British Columbia

Kathleen Jamieson

That might have been near the end of what I had to say.

What I want to emphasize is the need for the billions of dollars that are going to be allocated, presumably for home care over the next four years, and that there be a strong accountability framework negotiated in the health accord.

I spoke before that about my personal experience of trying to access some high-quality health support for my husband, who died of a very serious neurological disease with dementia. I could not access any care. I must say that 11 days after he died, I got a call saying that they were now ready to assess him. I'd had three quite lengthy interviews by telephone before that, but I didn't get the care when I needed it.

I just want to emphasize the need for much better home care, and for equal access for everybody. They don't have to be important persons. Everybody should be able to access good home care when they are older, and when they have mental illness or dementia, so that they can live at home comfortably, have some quality of life, and die at home. I think we can do that. It's not happening.

Thank you.

9:20 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Bill Casey

Thank you very much for your testimony. It has not fallen on deaf ears, I can assure you. It was very meaningful. Thanks very much.

Now we have our last presenter, who I overlooked in our introduction, and I'm sorry. Tanya Levesque is a caregiver and has helped victims of Alzheimer's for a long time. She advocates for their benefit in this area.

Tanya, please go ahead with your presentation.

9:20 a.m.

Tanya Levesque Caregiver, As an Individual

Thank you, Mr. Chair.

Good morning, everyone. My name is Tanya Levesque. I'm a young caregiver for my mother, Suzanne Levesque, who is now 65. I recently turned 41.

First, I want to thank you for the invitation to speak. It's truly a gift from God and a privilege for me, so thank you for the opportunity.

Mom was diagnosed with moderate-stage vascular dementia with significant brain atrophy in 2013 and mixed dementia in 2015-16. Dementia is a family affair. Her mother, my grandmother, is 86, and lives with Alzheimer's. Also, my grandmother's sister, who is 88, lives with Alzheimer's.

My mom's behaviour changed over several years. In my mid-thirties I really didn't know enough about dementia to start getting her tested. I thought that it was menopause or that she was just very tired from travelling. I now see the red flags when I reflect back. Educating people and promoting earlier diagnosis and intervention would possibly have helped her in her mid- to late-fifties.

There are two parts to my story. Part one is the difficulties I experienced while I cared for my mother at home for two and a half years, and part two is the difficulties I encountered during the long-term care process and beyond.

Part one begins in 2013. At the age of 37 I decided to take a leave of absence without pay to care for my mom at home. Where I work, my collective agreement says I have five years maximum to care for an immediate family member. I tried to make our limited financial resources work. My father died at a young age, leaving my mom with a little pension, and my mom didn't have a pension.

Here are some of the financial barriers I encountered. I was unable to access EI benefits, especially the EI compassionate care benefits. The criteria need to change for caregivers. I was unable to qualify for social assistance, and I certainly don't have job security. When I decide to go back to work in the next couple of years, they're going to place me on a priority list, and hopefully somebody will pick me off that priority list. Retirement is questionable at this time. There is a lack of subsidies for household expenses, which keep increasing, especially to fix a house that hasn't been repaired in 60 years. With increased food costs, I actually had to change my eating habits so I could save money, and I had to make sure my mom could eat properly as well.

Other difficulties I encountered were that there is no one-stop shop for information. The Alzheimer Society helped me quite a bit with the First Link program, but I had to do a lot of enquiries and research on my own. The program I had my mom involved with couldn't provide the activities they had actually wanted to, like pet therapy, because of the costs associated. They need more funding. In terms of home care services, my mom received 15 hours maximum for her daily care and activity. The staff really weren't trained to do a lot of things with her. They did watch television and go for walks. Some were good and some weren't, so I stayed home most of the time to make sure things went smoothly and she was still participating in life.

Part two is the difficulties I encounter in the process of long-term care and beyond. Here are some of the difficulties. I had to work on a plan B for my mother, because I was hospitalized in June 2015. With more home care services, I actually would have kept her at home so that I could care for her after the hospitalization and surgeries that I ended up having. My mother actually moved seven times in the time frame from December 21, 2015, to mid-June 2016 of this year. In less than seven months, she moved from a private care facility to a long-term care home. In the long-term care home, she moved three times to three different rooms, and then they sent her to the Royal Ottawa mental health facility. There she moved three times into three different rooms.

This was very hard for her. She was sent to the Royal Ottawa mental health facility because she had significant behaviours with the dementia, and I'm still convinced it's because of the medication they were giving her and all this moving about. This caused her a lot of distress. Her displacement is still not done to this day. Once she stabilizes at the Royal Ottawa, she's going to be moving into long-term care.

People with great difficulties with dementia end up being bounced around from long-term care, or from home, to a hospital, such as the Royal Ottawa. After they're stabilized, they're sent back to long-term care, and if the long-term care home can't reintegrate them back into the facility, they're bounced back either to the hospital or the Royal Ottawa. I've met some of these families.

More training and research funding needs to include dealing with special behaviours, like high anxiety and aggression, or at least have some homes that are specifically designated for people with special behaviours so that they have the necessary specialists, because homes are not prepared. We need to adapt to the sick person, and not have the sick person adapt to us and our policies.

I, like many other people, had to hire a private caregiver in long-term care to spend time with my mom, which was about two hours a day. I had to negotiate the salary, because I couldn't afford it. Staffing ratios need to increase and administration work needs to decrease, because they need to be spending time with our family members.

There is a brain imaging centre here at the Royal mental health facility, which is excellent, by the way. I wanted my mom to be tested or looked at, because I wanted them to do a comparative analysis of her brain now with the other scans she had over the years, but it's used only for patients who are in research projects, and there is no dementia care research funding. Our mental health facilities need funding for dementia care.

There was a Royal Ottawa special behaviours unit program that was run out of one of the Ottawa long-term care facilities, but it was placed on hold this year. They have to move the program to another home. This could take up to a year. Meanwhile, people are still suffering from special behaviours that they have.

The Phoenix pay system was rolled out this year, and I actually started receiving my bilingual bonus. This is adding to the interest that I am earning on little savings and an inheritance that I'm pulling from. Household income is considered when applying for subsidies, so there is a possibility that I may not qualify for a subsidy. Income tax is going to have to include these payments, and this may change the balance: either I owe you guys, or I am refunded from the government.

I could continue, but I will conclude. In my research, I found that Canada is very far behind other countries when it comes to dementia research, national strategies, and care. Collaboration with all the stakeholders is needed to create a good health care policy. The federal government can take the lead with this bill. Stay-at-home moms, executive assistants, professors, theatre directors, scientists, and priests are only some of the people with dementia I have encountered on my journey, along with their family members. They need your help, as do we caregivers. Passing Bill C-233 would be a significant stepping stone for everyone involved in this long and difficult journey.

Thank you.

9:30 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Bill Casey

Thank you.

Thank you, all, for your testimony. I think it's safe to say that everybody around this table has had some exposure to Alzheimer's or dementia of some sort, but your personal testimony certainly crystalizes the challenges, and some of the new ones. Kathleen's story is incredible. We want to thank you for your personal comments. It helps us move forward with this.

We'll start a series of questions. There will be seven minutes for the questions and the answers.

Mr. Kang.

November 17th, 2016 / 9:30 a.m.

Liberal

Darshan Singh Kang Liberal Calgary Skyview, AB

Thank you, Mr. Chair.

I want to thank all the stakeholders for coming here with their testimony.

I couldn't agree more with Kathleen and Tanya. That was very moving testimony. I know first-hand how helpful home care is, because my wife has suffered with mental health issues. Since 2005 we've had home care. It's not to the extent it should be, as Tanya mentioned, but it really turned our lives around. I got elected in 2008. I ran in the 2004 election. I wouldn't have been able to do this if it weren't for home care. I am here because of home care. We definitely need to do more for home care.

Lots of our seniors with dementia, lots of people with mental illness, want to stay in their homes. They don't want to be put in long-term care homes. We need to do more. If we put more into home care, it will save us lots of money on health care costs. It's a revolving door. My wife, with her mental health, used to go into the hospital for two weeks: a week home, two weeks in, a week home. Ever since we got home care, she has been home all the time. Do you know how much money it has saved us on the ambulance? She has a nervous breakdown here and there, but that could be contained with the help of home care.

Thank you very much for sharing your personal experiences here. That is my personal experience.

Coming back to the questions, we have people over 65 suffering. The seniors population will double by the year 2030. Do we have any numbers on young people, under 65, who are suffering from early onset?

9:35 a.m.

Former Chief Executive Officer of the Alzheimer Society of Canada and Health Care Executive, As an Individual

Mimi Lowi-Young

Yes, a growing number of people under the age of 65 have early onset dementia. Approximately 50,000 people today under the age of 65 have the disease. We haven't paid enough attention to this group. There is a growing need. We have seen examples—John Mann and others—where we see it happening in the younger population. I think we are now starting to get a better hold on the actual numbers, because it's being reported more, and being recognized, as an illness. It's not a natural course of getting older that you get the disease, but we are now seeing an increase in the number of people who are younger with the disease as well.

We don't have the exact numbers. We have an idea of how many there are today, but no sense in terms of being able to project it going forward.

9:35 a.m.

Liberal

Darshan Singh Kang Liberal Calgary Skyview, AB

I think by the time year 2030 rolls around, it will have a very big impact on our health care costs and maybe on our productivity as younger people are getting this disease too.

Anyone can answer this question. Can you describe both the current and future economic and social costs associated with the increasing number of Canadians being diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease and other forms of dementia?

9:35 a.m.

Former Chief Executive Officer of the Alzheimer Society of Canada and Health Care Executive, As an Individual

Mimi Lowi-Young

Right now the cost is $10.4 billion, and that's expected to double in less than 20 years. The costs are going to increase exponentially. We've sometimes talked about $33 billion, but based on some re-examination of the numbers, we know today it's about $10.4 billion per year on direct and indirect costs. Indirect costs are costs to society as well as direct care costs.

On the comment about home care, yes, home care is extremely important, but I think what we're hearing from people is that the people who are delivering the care, people like PSWs, are not formally trained in caring for people with dementia. We can have all the wonderful care for home care, but if people are not adequately trained, then they cannot support people with dementia in their homes, and therefore that leads to early admission to long-term care.

9:35 a.m.

Liberal

Darshan Singh Kang Liberal Calgary Skyview, AB

You talked about prevention. Do we have some kind of framework in place on how to do the prevention before it snowballs?

9:35 a.m.

Former Chief Executive Officer of the Alzheimer Society of Canada and Health Care Executive, As an Individual

Mimi Lowi-Young

The issue here is there is a lot of research being done in the area of prevention or efforts to reduce the risks of getting dementia. We know for a fact that in terms of exercise and diet, heart healthy is brain healthy. Some of the research has shown that. We need more research in the area, obviously, but we know there are definitely things people can do to reduce their risks. We're not saying eliminate it, but reduce. Diet, exercise, controlling blood pressure, definitely cessation of smoking are critical areas. Those are the kinds of things that are being promoted by the Alzheimer society and Health Canada and PHAC. These are important elements in terms of preventing or reducing this.