We strongly favour it and have been advocating for that for some time.
I apologize if I've shared this example with you before, but one of the elements that makes hospitals safe is a set of standards everybody follows. If you find yourself in the emergency room in Winchester, where I live, or in Grande Prairie, when you you walk through the door, it looks the same. It smells the same. They ask you the same questions. They use the same technology. You can predict exactly what's going to happen in every emergency room, depending on what your issue is.
Long-term care is a free-for-all. Strong staffing, very strong standards of care in acute care and so on, highly accredited, regulated settings.... We believe that the same must be held true for long-term care where the staffing is often very sparse. We can't forget that safety in nursing care is often vigilance in the number of eyes, but you can only see so many people. If the staffing isn't great, whatever the categories, it tends to lead to trouble.