Good afternoon. Thank you for the opportunity to be here.
I am pleased to be joined by my colleague Josette Roussel. Both of us bring to you a clinical background in gerontology. It is indeed a subject dear to our hearts.
On behalf of Canada's 250,000 nurses, thank you for the opportunity to bring you the nursing profession's perspective on a significant and hidden problem: elder abuse.
Elder abuse is any action or deliberate inaction by a person in a position of trust that causes harm, or could reasonably be expected to cause harm, to an older person. This includes all types of abuse, including emotional, physical, sexual, and financial, as well as instances of neglect and violation of rights. According to Statistics Canada, seniors over the age of 65 represented 13% of our population in 2009. In that year, almost 8,000 instances of elder abuse were reported, an increase of 14% since 2004.
Elders are the pearls of our society. Just think of your own parents or grandparents and the many older adults who have had an impact on your lives. Recognizing the value of their contributions to our culture and our society must remain at the centre of their care and treatment.
Canada's nurses are concerned about elder abuse across the continuum of care and throughout the country, not simply because the rates are increasing, but also because it exists at all. As a society, we must have zero tolerance for elder abuse. By approaching this issue in a comprehensive, multi-faceted way, we can lay out a strategy that will build the culture of caring, dignity, and respect that our older Canadians deserve.
Elder abuse is not only a patient safety issue. It is also a public health imperative.
Our first recommendation to the committee is to develop a comprehensive strategy to prevent elder abuse. This strategy should include targeting outreach programs anchored in public heath services, supportive housing, and tax credits for seniors, as well as an accelerated focus on populations affected by conditions that create vulnerability.
Many of these populations are immigrants who experience barriers to accessing help, senior women who are homebound and living in poverty, and first nations, Inuit, and Métis peoples. An incomparable opportunity exists to challenge, through friendly visitor and day care programs and especially through public health nurse visits, the isolation and loneliness many seniors face.
Looking to an international example, Copenhagen has a program whereby public health nurses visit people over the age of 70 in their homes. They assess their needs, provide care, and generally ensure they have access to the wellness supports they need.
Evidence demonstrates that in addition to the visible interventions of nurses when working with the elderly, nurses bring a personal engagement and caring that reduces the feelings of isolation and profound loneliness that so many older Canadians experience. Such programs have the potential to address the high rates of depression that plague our elderly and are associated with the high rates of suicide in this vulnerable population.
We need a genuine investment in public health to restore the professional presence of nurses in the lives of our seniors. Nurses, through their holistic education and experience, and through their time spent with patients and families, see very real signs of neglect and abuse. Nurses are in one of the best positions to act.
As public health is our recommended vehicle to address elder abuse, education and awareness are the resources we need as care providers and as a society. We would like the thank the federal government for the funding they are directing to some important projects, such as the new horizons for seniors program. Through one of these projects, CNA has partnered with the Registered Nurses' Association of Ontario on the PEACE program, which is promoting the awareness of elder abuse in long-term care homes. This program is building these resources amongst care providers.
Ten long-term care settings were selected from across Canada to participate in the project. Each of these PEACE partners has developed and implemented tools, such as an education curriculum for health care providers, patients, and families, as well as printed materials, that are enhancing resident safety and quality of care.
Awareness programs based on these tools are currently being implemented to educate front-line workers. Topics include understanding and recognizing elder abuse; provincial, territorial, and federal laws surrounding elder abuse; what to do when elder abuse is present or suspected; and creating a work environment that values residents' safety and well-being.
Let me share with you one of the experiences reported by a PEACE project participant. A resident of a long-term care facility asks for toast. A care provider brings toast with jam. The resident says, “I wanted peanut butter, not jam.” The care provider says, “Well, I already brought you jam.” A colleague of the health care provider overhears this, remembers the learning module, and recognizes this as disrespectful behaviour toward the resident. The colleague intervenes to bring the resident what they requested, and then intervenes with the co-worker in a constructive way to identify the behaviour and promote dignity and respect.
This is the impact that a program can have. It may seem like a small example, but this kind of neglect is a pervasive problem in care settings across Canada. Programs like PEACE, that build awareness and give caregivers the tools to recognize and intervene in these situations, also give us hope and the power to promote the values of dignity, caring, and respect.
We'll include more of these examples and tangible results and impacts from the PEACE program in our written submission to each of you.
The PEACE partnership is an excellent first step, but we need to do more. Therefore, we recommend that the federal government fund the adaptation and implementation of the PEACE elder abuse tool kit across additional health care settings, such as acute and community care, and the development of the technological resources to support its implementation. Because the foundations of the program are universal, we could make a real difference by transporting it to other settings, such as hospitals, seniors residences, and home care situations.
Community-based service providers are an excellent front-line resource for preventing elder abuse. For example, a home care nurse or personal support worker is in an excellent position to identify signs of abuse in the home of a client, signs that might otherwise go unnoticed. They may notice that a client cannot buy food or personal care items, or pay bills, that valuable items suddenly go missing, or that bank statements are no longer going to their homes. Their client could well be a victim of financial abuse.
In addition to adapting the PEACE partner tools for use outside long-term care settings, they should also be delivered in the format that is the most appropriate for the end user. For example, if the home care worker described above uses a smartphone, a software app might be the best medium for her to access the necessary information. She could refer to it for an immediate, on-the-spot intervention, and to develop a specific plan of action for that particular instance of abuse.
Such tools could also be adapted for use in other sectors and settings, and for other age groups, allowing social workers, first responders, and family members to quickly and easily access advice, direction, and reassurance.
The beauty of this model is that elder abuse prevention tools adapted to various audiences and settings would be developed from a common framework. This would prevent a piecemeal approach, where concepts and terminology vary widely across regions and across settings. That spells better integration of services and interventions for the victims of abuse no matter what their circumstances.
Registered nurses across Canada will, of course, continue to promote the prevention of elder abuse, and we ask for your assistance in stepping up the intensity of our efforts. By transposing the successes of the PEACE project to new areas and investing in a public health-based prevention strategy, Canada can take a tangible and positive step towards ending the cycle of elder abuse, wherever it may occur--a crucial step towards a safe and healthy future where dignity and respect are a right, not a luxury.
Thank you so much for your time and attention today. I look forward to your questions.