You're absolutely right. It is a huge issue. I think that problem is part of the reason there is an interest in expanding home care services rather than nursing home care.
Thirteen years ago, when we established the council, the veterans organizations' representatives on the council were, as the academics would put it, wedded to the bed. They had legislative authority for so many contract beds, so many nursing beds, and so many hospital beds. The council was reluctant in the first year or two to actually see the department move to expand home care service because they were afraid the money would be shifted away from these valued beds.
The gerontological experts on the committee were successful--I know we were--in getting across the idea that, actually, while there will always be some people who will need nursing home care, people like to stay in their own homes as much as possible. Even for demented people with Alzheimer's disease, for example, there are as many of them being nicely taken care of at home as there are...
It doesn't necessarily mean institutionalization in a nursing home. Others on our committee are much more expert on long-term care. In fact, we had Canada's leading experts on long-term care on the Gerontological Advisory Council. François Béland is one and Dr. Shapiro, from Manitoba, is another.
I think it's easier to sort of organize and contract for home delivered long-term care services in the rural areas than the alternative, which is to bring people to larger centres, to nursing homes. We no longer have a situation of every little town having its own nursing home. So if you want to keep people closer to home, community-based services will help, in part, to solve that problem.