during the first year of the covid-19 pandemic, long-term care residents accounted for three per cent of all covid-19 cases and 43 per cent of covid-19 deaths. ontario brought members of the military to help with some of the hardest-hit homes during the first severe wave of the pandemic.
the pc government made significant promises aimed at improving long-term care in ontario. among them was to build 30,000 new beds by 2028. rayment noted that only a fraction of those beds are in place. “at the rate they are going, it will take 125 years to add that many beds.”
as a result, wait times to get in to long-term care have continued to surge in recent years.
over the past decade, waiting lists for long-term care in ontario have doubled, according to the ontario long term care association. this year, there are expected to be 50,000 people waiting for long-term care beds across the province, according to the association.
in ottawa, the waits are even longer, according to health quality ontario. demand for long-term care is expected to grow by an average of 38 per cent in ontario over the next decade. in the ottawa and eastern ontario region, the demand for long-term care is expected to be 43 per cent. currently, people are waiting 246 days to get a long-term care bed in the champlain region, which includes ottawa.