If I can focus my remarks on Canada and Ontario—I've practised law in Ontario for 36 years, 26 years with the Advocacy Centre for the Elderly—there are analogous sections: section 215, failure to provide the necessaries of life, and sections 221 and following, criminal negligence causing death and bodily harm. These are very difficult charges to prosecute in the long-term care situation, mainly because the legal liability standard for criminal negligence involves causation, which is difficult to prove.
In any event, when it's an act of omission, it's hard to identify which particular individuals are responsible for the omissions—the care that is not provided.