Thank you, Marcus.
I'll continue and talk about the veterans independence program and the research study.
The veterans independence program, or VIP, which you're familiar with, serves just over 100,000 clients across Canada. About 6,400 of these receive nursing home care. It's our flagship program for seniors. It was designed to function as an integrated and coordinated continuum of care, including home care and institutional care components. There continues to be considerable interest in VIP as a care model among other groups such as the Royal Canadian Legion and also in jurisdictions across Canada and elsewhere.
VIP, first known as the aging veterans program, was started in 1981 as an alternative care model for aging WWII veterans. The program design was developed in the late 1970s to address the enormous challenge of planning for the care needs of over half a million WWII veterans who would be reaching old age in the 1980s. The new model would provide an alternative to the building of thousands of new long-term care beds, while also satisfying the preference of veterans to remain in the community with their families as long as possible.
The program was built on the cutting-edge notions of independence and care in the community. It has evolved and undergone a number of modifications, but there are several core principles I want to go over briefly.
One is comprehensiveness. The program is comprehensive in scope, with a wide range of services to promote choice and address a wide range of types and intensity of care need. I think you are familiar with the components: services for personal care, home-making, access to nutrition services, grounds maintenance, health and diagnostic services, home adaptation, nursing home care, transportation, as well as access to a broad range of treatment benefits.
The concept of early intervention has also been a hallmark of this program. The VIP is what we call a preventative and maintenance home care model. It provides a lower level of service intensity during the early stages of a client’s functional decline in order to promote well-being and independence and more successful adaptation in the longer term. In this way, services can be adjusted over time to compensate for changes in health circumstances as health needs increase with frailty or disability.
Home support services are another key part of the program, including basic housekeeping and grounds maintenance. These have been essential features of the VIP design. As Dr. Hollander has stated, home support is a critically important type of support that is based on the idea that a modest input of non-professional services like homemaking and grounds maintenance can play a pivotal role in supporting well-being, living at home, and functioning in the community as long as possible. It also plays an important role by supporting and leveraging the inputs of care provided by family caregivers, who are a cornerstone of veteran care.
Self-managed care is also an enduring theme of the VIP program design. In most jurisdictions VIP clients have the flexibility to choose their own provider of services for home-making, personal care, and grounds maintenance services, unless they want or need help making these decisions. This aspect of the program promotes independence and choice, as users often want to play an active role in decision-making about service choices.
Finally, case management is the fifth key point. It is also a central feature of the program. This is an approach that organizes client contact, needs assessment, planning for care, follow-up, and management of care transition. The human resource input to support this is called the client service delivery team, located in district offices. The team, led by a counsellor/case manager, works closely with a client service assistant, nurses, and medical advisers to problem solve, work on complex care plans, and approve certain service and equipment requests.
I'm going to talk a little about the overseas veteran pilot, which has also helped us confirm the effectiveness of the VIP program design as an alternative to costly institutional care.
In 1999 Veterans Affairs implemented the overseas service veterans at home pilot project in three sites that were identified as having significant wait times for admission to a contract bed. OSVs, which I think you are familiar with now, are a group of VAC clients who were not eligible for VAC programs except for our most expensive program, a contract care bed. The pilot sites were Camp Hill in Halifax, the Perley in Ottawa, and The Lodge at Broadmead in Victoria.
Under the pilot, veterans who had historically only been eligible for this most expensive option, a contract bed, if assessed as requiring long-term care and if a bed was not available, could receive interim benefits from the VIP program--in other words, home care benefits--while they were on wait list.
The pilot was successful, and after an internal assessment it was revealed that for the majority of participants, should a bed become available, their preference was to remain at home with the added home supports. Interestingly, housekeeping services were the most used element of the program. Families reported that the home care option played a key role in maintaining their independence and helping them continue in their role as caregivers.
Upon completion of the assessment of the pilot, it was extended nationally in November 2001, and formalizing legislation was passed in 2003.
In a nutshell, though, the pilot is kind of a dramatic illustration of how care substitution can work. If more desirable care options are available, it's possible to deliver care for less cost. As this project was not comprehensively evaluated at the time, it is part of the focus of an important research study, which I'll now briefly talk about, that's called the continuing care research project, to make informed decisions on continuing care policy at Veterans Affairs, as well as to make a contribution to national policy-making on continuum of care issues.
Veterans Affairs implemented a large-scale research study in partnership with the Ontario Seniors' Secretariat. The overall purpose of the study is to develop new knowledge to contribute to future policy and planning with respect to continuing care for veterans and to contribute to the broader policy debate regarding the provision of health services to the elderly.
The research project has two overlapping studies. Taken together, both studies feature a measurement strategy that includes a sophisticated economic analysis of financial costs and care outcomes for veterans independence program clients across three care contacts. That's in-home care and residential care, and also supportive housing. This will include measurement and costing of care contributions from VAC, but also from other sources, including informal primary caregivers. Level of care need is also carefully measured to ensure apple-to-apple comparisons of costs and outcomes.
The first study addresses the need for further study of the OSV pilot that I have just described. It is intended to provide a rigorous and independent evaluation of the OSV initiative. Information has been collected through hundreds of interviews at the sites of the original pilot: Halifax, Ottawa, and Victoria. Here the focus is on comparison of home care and institutional care, consistent with the pilot. Analysis of this information is now under way.
The second study is a broader and larger cost-effectiveness study of home care, supportive housing, and residential care. It's being undertaken in the Toronto area, in which three groups of veterans will be compared: clients in long-term home care, clients in supportive housing, and residential care clients. Over 1,000 interviews are completed, and analyses are well under way.
This study will address some key questions about the VIP and the continuum of care, including a rigorous review of the OSV pilot, including the overall strengths of the VIP model and our continuum of care and approach. We'll be able to look at levels of satisfaction with the program among veterans and family members. We'll be looking at the cost-effectiveness and efficiency of the continuum of care, and whether there are opportunities to improve effectiveness or encourage more care substitutions. Finally, we'll be understanding more about the contributions of family caregivers, who play an important role in veteran care.
Data collection for these studies is complete and analyses are under way by Dr. Hollander and his group. Final results of these studies are expected to be available in the spring of 2008. We'll be receiving feedback on these studies from a national advisory committee. It includes representation from three provinces as well as a number of groups with an interest in continuing care in Canada.
We would be able to describe today some of the preliminary findings, if members want to explore that in more depth.
Overall, the purpose of this kind of work is to learn more about how to organize care delivery systems and how to use resources effectively, because using resources effectively would be a key issue in the context of the veterans health services review.
To conclude, we believe the VIP has been a very effective program. Two key features of the program's design are emphasis on prevention and maintenance and on its recognition of the importance of basic home support services.
We look forward to the results of the research study we have discussed, to better understand the program and how it can be improved in the context of the veterans health services review.
I thank the chairman for the time we had available to us to present this morning. Thank you.